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Eskimeaux - "Year of The Rabbit" | Album Review

Eskimeaux - "Year of The Rabbit" | Album Review

Year of the Rabbit has a slightly darker tone than it's predecessor, O.K. Melodically, YOTR feels like a classic Eskimeaux album. It chronologically fits into Smith's discography like a glove. Lyrically, Smith matures with each release. In a short amount of time, the album hits on themes of personal growth, insecurity, fear, love, and lust. 

Cat Be Damned - "Daydreams In A Roach Motel" | Album Review

Cat Be Damned - "Daydreams In A Roach Motel" | Album Review

Daydreams in a Roach Motel is a deeply weird release, one that pushes past a stale game of “spot the reference” to paint a larger regional portrait of gender identity and spiritual renewal, of life and death, horizon and transience in the thick flow of the James. Cat Be Damned’s hazy lo-fi feels like a fitting artifact of too many landscapes to count, compounded over soft synths and hushed vocals that teeter towards collapse. 

Car Seat Headrest - "Teens of Denial" | Album Review

Car Seat Headrest - "Teens of Denial" | Album Review

Car Seat Headrest songs are about the big, scary questions that we’re all asking ourselves. Although Toledo doesn’t claim to have the answers, you still end up feeling empowered as a listener. The record captures the all too familiar sense of emptiness and uncertainty that comes with the start of adulthood, and it will fiercely resonate with young people who are trying to figure out how to live in a world that feels like it's falling apart more everyday.

Julia Brown - "An Abundance of Strawberries" | Album Review

Julia Brown - "An Abundance of Strawberries" | Album Review

Sam Ray is the bedroom-pop powerhouse behind Julia Brown. The project formed in 2013 with the release of To Be Close To You- a light-hearted indie pop album full of lo-fi love songs. With An Abundance… Julia Brown returns, taking on a much darker tone and hitting on sadder elements of love including loss, heartbreak, desire and dread. 

PJ Harvey - "The Hope Six Demolition Project" | Album Review

PJ Harvey - "The Hope Six Demolition Project" | Album Review

PJ Harvey is a subversive and uncompromising artist that rewards a deep immersion in her music. Her output generally defies easy categorization and straightforward subject matter. The Hope Six Demolition Project isn’t any different, although this time I’ve been struggling with the effectiveness of her observational presentation.

Suuns - "Hold/Still" | Album Review

Suuns - "Hold/Still" | Album Review

This experimental art-rock crew has built a solid following over the last six years with incredibly haunting tunes that range in style from the brooding, mobile squall of 2010’s debut Zeroes QC to the cold, bodily grooves of 2013’s Images du Futur, all the while incorporating the breathy, alarming moments of early 2000s Radiohead into an eerie palette of psychedelia, krautrock, and oddly driving rhythms. But only “Leyla,” from last year’s collaborative album with Jerusalem in My Heart, points towards the sparseness of Suuns’ newest LP, Hold/Still. 

Valley Slander - "How Animal" | Album Review

Valley Slander - "How Animal" | Album Review

Valley Slander’s debut release How Animal is a brief and excellently crafted slice of modern no-wave influenced punk music with a distinct southern vibe. Valley Slander hail from Harrisonburg, Virginia; a small college-town located deep in the valleys surrounding the Shenandoah Mountain Range. Their downbeat, mid-paced, scorching brand of punk is equal parts doomed hardcore and southern sway that harvests inspiration from the rotten end of southern life.

Greys - "Outer Heaven" | Album Review

Greys - "Outer Heaven" | Album Review

Outer Heaven sees Greys' ambitious vision fully realized. Longtime friend and producer Mike Rocha helped the band, who co-produced it, bring it to life. Where some of their previous efforts carried more obvious influences, the band weaves more disparate inspirations into a sonic world all their own that is both immediate and ambiguously serene.

Death Index - "Death Index" | Album Review

Death Index - "Death Index" | Album Review

The international duo recorded their debut self-titled LP between the three cities of Berlin, Tampa Bay, and Palermo. Despite such a scattered-seeming recording process their effort comes out with surprising clarity and cohesion. Death Index is packed with well written and produced fusions of goth, post-punk, metal, and noise-rock.

Parquet Courts - "Human Performance" | Album Review

Parquet Courts - "Human Performance" | Album Review

Human Performance is a fitting title. Not because the band feels the need to affirm some archaic rockist idea of authenticity and distance themselves from popular electronic music, but simply because they've allowed themselves to fully expose their own flaws and insecurities instead of hiding them under the guise of devil-may-care nonchalance.