Post-Trash Facebook Post-Trash Twitter

The Spirit of the Beehive - "You Are Arrived (But You've Been Cheated)" | Album Review

The Spirit of the Beehive - "You Are Arrived (But You've Been Cheated)" | Album Review

The newest record from The Spirit of the Beehive entitled You are Arrived (but You’ve Been Cheated) is a fever dream that sets the listener in a dark bedroom writhing in sweat-soaked blankets. This release isn’t so much of a departure from their previous self titled LP as it is a descent deeper into the swirling dream world that the band has created. 

Fuzzy Meadows: The Week In Review (January 25th - January 31st)

Fuzzy Meadows: The Week In Review (January 25th - January 31st)

"Fuzzy Meadows: The Week in Review" is a weekly round-up of the best new music premiered this week across the internet. It's a weekly embarrassment of riches, let Post-Trash be your guide. It's the weekend, here's what happened...

Iggy Pop Announces "Post Pop Depression" Tour Dates

Iggy Pop Announces "Post Pop Depression" Tour Dates

Iggy Pop’s new album Post Pop Depression will be supported by a very limited run of one-time-only live performances in specially selected venues. The Post Pop Depression tour will mark the sole occasion that the album lineup of Iggy, Joshua Homme, Dean Fertita and Matt Helders—augmented by Troy Van Leeuwen and Matt Sweeney—will perform this material, as well as classics spanning Iggy’s legendary solo career, in a live setting.

Mike & The Melvins Announce "Three Men and a Baby" on Sub Pop

Mike & The Melvins Announce "Three Men and a Baby" on Sub Pop

Three Men and a Baby is the new album by Mike and the Melvins. It was supposed to come out sixteen years ago. In 1998, around the time his band godheadSilo went on hiatus, Mike Kunka busied himself by tagging along on a tour with his friends the Melvins. Somewhere along the way, Mike and the Melvins decided to make a record together, and gave the project the imaginative moniker Mike and the Melvins. 

Ty Segall - "Emotional Mugger" | Album Review

Ty Segall - "Emotional Mugger" | Album Review

In a 2013 interview via The Drone, Ty Segall explains his obsession with garage rock at an early age. “The only flaw of garage rock,” he mentions, “is the repetition.” Over the course of his insistent stream of studio albums, Segall has proven that he’s serious about that claim. With Emotional Mugger, he takes Bowie’s credence in shape shifting and, on first listen, gives us his strangest album to date. 

Fuzzy Meadows: The Week In Review (January 18th - January 24th)

Fuzzy Meadows: The Week In Review (January 18th - January 24th)

"Fuzzy Meadows: The Week in Review" is a weekly round-up of the best new music premiered this week across the internet. It's a weekly embarrassment of riches, let Post-Trash be your guide. It's the weekend, here's what happened...

Washer - "Here Comes Washer" | Album Review

Washer - "Here Comes Washer" | Album Review

Washer finds a happy medium between the pop sensibilities you may find in the late ‘90s—early 2000’s punk scene and the fuzzy, slightly-math-rock influenced work of their EIS peers. Most songs on the record are singalong friendly, while some contain a part or two that induces finger-counting, or an ending seemingly unrelated to the rest of the track

No Friends Talk Slowcore, Disintegration, and Purging Emotions | Exclusive Interview

No Friends Talk Slowcore, Disintegration, and Purging Emotions | Exclusive Interview

No Friends, a Hudson, NY-based four-piece slowcore/lo-fi band quietly released their new EP, I think we’re alone now. The band’s members attend Bard College yet the EP touches on themes of nightmares, disorientation, dreams and feeling numb while exploring drugs and drinking. 

Spencer Radcliffe - "Looking In" | Album Review

Spencer Radcliffe - "Looking In" | Album Review

Radcliffe’s first record under his own name is a constantly buzzing machine even in its quietest moments; a jarring found sound or rogue synth melody is lurking in the shadows continuously, giving each song a depth that is uniquely Radcliffe’s. This record is at times reminiscent of early albums by The Microphones in their eerie and dense but still sweet sounding progressions, as well as their dual ability to turn uneasiness into complex beauty. 

Julien Baker - "Sprained Ankle" | Album Review

Julien Baker - "Sprained Ankle" | Album Review

Those who wear their feelings on their sleeves aren’t to be trusted. Emotions are for the weak. Sprained Ankle by Julien Baker is a slap in the face to that line of thinking. It shares a lineage with artists like Pedro the Lion and Mineral. Intimate songs that are open about lost loves, doubts of faith, dealings with the darker sides of our inward beings. 

Fuzzy Meadows: The Week In Review (January 11th - January 17th)

Fuzzy Meadows: The Week In Review (January 11th - January 17th)

"Fuzzy Meadows: The Week in Review" is a weekly round-up of the best new music premiered this week across the internet. It's a weekly embarrassment of riches, let Post-Trash be your guide. It's the weekend, here's what happened...

Polyon - "Blue" | Album Review

Polyon - "Blue" | Album Review

Though they have arguably more in common with melodic post-hardcore bands like Pale Angels or Cave In than they do with Hawkwind or White Hills, it's difficult to talk about Polyon's music without lapsing into the kind of language used to describe the star-scraping riffs and psychedelia typically associated with the lauded purveyors of space rock, simply because of the scope and atmosphere of their sound.

Bedroom Eyes - "Honeysuckle" | Album Review

Bedroom Eyes - "Honeysuckle" | Album Review

a 10-track celestially atmospheric sonic collage of sludge, fuzz, reverb, and dream pop falsetto. Carefully gift-wrapped into an intimate and dreamy continuum, Bedroom Eyes offer a new take on grunge/shoegaze, blending pop accessibility with sonic intricacy for a record vague in delivery but specific in affect. 

SUPERTEEN - "Oh Baby" | Post-Trash Exclusive Premiere

SUPERTEEN - "Oh Baby" | Post-Trash Exclusive Premiere

Twisted post-punk and dark as hell psych rock are par for the course, strung out in every direction as the guitars work together to create a thick layered madness. At the core of their charm lies duel vocalists Sam Robinson and Meryl Schultz, often singing simultaneously, harmonizing at times and delightfully working against each at others. Beautiful, discordant, well structured yet deceptively loose, their music pushes as it pulls, transfixed in it's sinister witchy grooves.