New York’s Pleaser is the duo of Carrie Furniss (ex-Birthing Hips) and Travis Hagan (halfsour), but knowing their previous work doesn’t really paint the picture that is their latest band. The pair go for a decidedly more electronic sound with Pleaser, a band that seemingly finds the pair influenced primarily by dating based reality shows.
Ordinary Reaper - "No Plans" | Album Review
Locate S,1 - "Personalia" | Album Review
Peel Dream Magazine - "Agitprop Alterna" | Album Review
This is esoteric and cerebral rock. The use of Agitprop (political propaganda, especially in art or literature) in the album’s title defines this as highbrow music, clearly, but Peel Dream Magazine’s quality ensures its never pretentious or fawning. It’s clear that Stevens thinks consciously and acutely about the meaning of his music.
Gaytheist - "How Long Have I Been On Fire?" | Album Review
Isobel Campbell - "There Is No Other..." | Album Review
Isobel Campbell emerges solo after a quiet fourteen years. Her latest album, There Is No Other… presents a bit of contemporary seriousness without overshadowing her familiar, dreamy sound. There Is No Other is different from anything we’ve already heard from Campbell. On this album emerges her new persona: a soft-spoken activist.
The Duke of Surl - "Breakin'" (feat. Matt Gibbs) | Post-Trash Premiere
Fuzzy Meadows: The Week's Best New Music (May 4th - May 10th)
Primo! - "Sogni" | Album Review
Philary - "I Complain" | Album Review
Philary is the solo project of Alex Molini (Pile, Jackal Onasis, Stove), who has cultivated an artful combination of heaviness and harmony on I Complain. Molini melds sludgy, bass-driven riffs with catchy and melodic vocal lines; it’s a winning combination, and yet it is performed here in a way we haven’t quite heard before.
Bad History Month - "Old Blues" | Album Review
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard - "Chunky Shrapnel" | Album Review
Live records are often boring, but this King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard collection finds new ground, and finds an interesting cue. The songs of the record are stylistic landscapes, aesthetic insights that touch a style that embraces from psychedelic rock albums like Gumboot Soup to the stoner metal of Infest the Rats’ Nest.
As In - "Not A Doctor, Not Today" | Post-Trash Premiere
The band is comprised of Emerson Stevens and Candace Clement, both formerly of Western Mass’ late great Bunny’s A Swine, a true staple of slop-rock for all eternity. The duo got together to make some new lo-fi music, recording on mics not recommended for recording, and generally giving it their signature best.
Lié - "You Want It Real" | Album Review
Trace Mountains - "Lost In The Country" | Album Review
Larger than the sum of its parts, Trace Mountains’ Lost in the Country is honest and lasting. Each little hook, vocal flair, snare hit. The songs keep an enduring pace, excited to get moving, even if it’s just to the woods out the front door. The drum kit hikes the path so the lyrics can admire the world and the melody can whistle along the way.
Jad Fair & Hifiklub - "Staying At Home" Video | Post-Trash Premiere
Dragoons - "Horrorscope" | Album Review
Dragoons are a product of Melbourne’s music scene: a group of friends whose members occupy various bands, sharing in creative energy; united by a vision deeply rooted in community. They’ve built an identity that is as hardworking as it is prolific, something further extrapolated on their latest release Horrorscope.
Johanna Warren - "Chaotic Good" | Album Review
Died - "Oja de Macao" | Post-Trash Premiere
Pure X - "Pure X" | Album Review
With their new self titled album, Pure X make a roaring comeback. The last missive from the Austin, Texas based band was Angel. Released in 2016, the sound of that album was crisp and clear; with songs drifting by at a languid pace. With their newest album, Pure X keep the tempo the same but let a bit of chaos into their songs.