Fuzzy Meadows: The Week's Best New Music (April 18th - April 24th)
SUPERTEEN - "Isn't A Person" | Album Review
The entire album flows fluidly and lucidly, transitioning smoothly from heavier moments of driving washed out post-punk to bright and jangly indie folk. The guitar and bass tones are situated expertly throughout the album to have just the right amount of ambiguity and just the right amount of clear expression.
Mothers - "When You Walk a Long Distance You Are Tired" | Album Review
CFM - "Still Life of Citrus and Slime" | Album Review
by Niko Nygard (@hatsuneniko)
Still Life of Citrus and Slime is the debut album of CFM, the solo project of Charles Moothart. Some may recognize Moothart as a frequent collaborator with Ty Segall, and a mainstay in the west coast’s fuzzy-guitar-driven garage rock scene. For people familiar with Moothart’s previous output, Citrus and Slime is not exactly a surprising album: fuzz-drenched riffs abound and manic solos burst from static hazes on a regular basis. Of course, none of that’s necessarily a bad thing, you don’t play a certain type of music for as long as Moothart has without getting pretty good at it after all.
What’s more interesting is listening to Moothart develop his own voice, separate from that of his peers with whom he’s probably always going to be linked. Citrus and Slime was written fairly quickly-over the course of two months-and the result is a relative sprawl of different ideas within the same framework. There’s a certain degree of playfulness to it all, with Moothart leaping from idea to idea so quickly that sometimes that he doesn’t even allow a song to finish before beginning the next one. There are slow builders, frenzied riffs, and even a musical quotation from The Beatles tossed in for good measure; and, of course, the whole thing is awash in psychedelic fuzz.
Taken as a whole, Still Life of Citrus of Slime is more a series of bullet points than a fully-realized essay. Much like a still life itself, the album presents images and ideas without necessarily fleshing them out all the way, and while this may sound like a negative, I don’t mean it as such. Rather, the unbridled creative stream of different musical concepts is an exciting insight into what may be coming should Moothart continue his solo career. After listening to Citrus and Slime it’s difficult to tell where Moothart may decide to take his sound, but if there’s one thing we can count on it’s that it will assuredly be interesting. And fuzzy.
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
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.
Fuzzy Meadows: The Week's Best New Music (April 11th - April 17th)
Mogwai - "Atomic" | Album Review
Celebration Guns - "The Me That Used To Be" | Album Review
Rob Crow's Gloomy Place - "You're Doomed. Be Nice." | Album Review
Crow himself looks great. Fit and lean it’s clear that the break was beneficial. You can also hear it in the music. He might even be having fun. The album is full of that patented Crow “prog pop” sound. Baritone guitar and bass heavy melodies, heavy lyrics sung in a sing-song way, and riffs and grooves a plenty.
So Pitted - "Neo" | Album Review
Fuzzy Meadows: The Week's Best New Music (April 4th - April 10th)
Steakhouse Records presents "DBTS: BS3" | Post-Trash Exclusive Premiere
Oliver Ackermann on Death by Audio, New York DIY and Starting Over
49 South 2nd street was intended to be a practice/living space for a few people and to house Death by Audio, a budding guitar pedal factory founded by Ackermann. Of course, Death by Audio morphed into what many would argue was the beating heart of an entire artist community. Less than 10 years later, the location had become a hot commodity, and the spaces became no more. Death by New York.
Frankie Cosmos - "Next Thing" | Album Review
Next Thing should be listened to with close attention. While the catchy hooks and upbeat rhythms may soundtrack a summer drive to the beach, I find the record best suits a solitary listening experience. Just like rewarding poetry, the songs on Next Thing play like a candid conversation between writer and reader.