Tuesday 28 January 2014

Satan's Satyrs - Wild Beyond Belief! (2012)

We all love gritty lo-fidelity just as much as the next guy, but damn if Satan's Satyrs don't take low quality production to the next level, and it sounds absolutely wonderful. Straight out of the boondocks of Herndon, Virginia these guys deliver, they bring back the same feelings of nostalgia every lo-fi enthusiast gets when they listen to an old Venom track; their aesthetics range as well, covering doom metal, punk rock, garage rock, stoner rock, etc. Not to mention their over exuberant biker themes, and the fact that they were selected as special guests by Electric Wizard at the Electric Acid Orgy, these guys are clearly notable, hopefully this review compels you all to give them a listen, they surely don't get enough recognition throughout the community.

Download (Zippyshare)

Sunday 19 January 2014

be____all - be____all (2012)




be____all is, for lack of a better word, an enigmatic artist(s?) from Massachusetts. They make what they describe as noise pop, and it's exactly what it sounds like. This album clocks in at just under 20 minutes, but it is not an EP, from what I can gather. This self-titled release conjures images of travelling in a metro train, late at night, with only your thoughts and the twinkling city skyline accompanying you. A pleasant, if slightly unsettling ambient experience awaits the listener, and this album (as with all their releases) is available for free from their bandcamp.

be____all is the be all, end all artist of noise pop. Fans of music that's a bit "out there" will enjoy them.




Bandcamp

Tuesday 14 January 2014

Drive Like Jehu - Drive Like Jehu (1991)


Drive Like Jehu was a post-hardcore band from San Diego, California who from 1990-1995 made two of some of the most influential albums in the post-hardcore genres. Though short lived, they paved a way for many bands in the new millennium. This album, the band's debut, is a very straightforward and cutting album. Filled with driving grooves and powerhouse drumming, the album is a pummel fest. Rick Froberg's vocals range from punk rock rasps to almost grunge-esque clean vocals. Songs like Step on Chameleon and Good Luck in Jail have infectious hooks on the verses and choruses, locking in the listener. This album also features multi-faceted songs with longer lengths such as O Pencil Sharp and If It Kills You. Drive Like Jehu's ability to project raw emotion is almost unparalleled.



Sunday 12 January 2014

Breach - It's Me God (1997)


Post-Hardcore is notorious for having a generally bad rap with most of the musical community today because of certain bands that try to define themselves in the genre. Swedish band Breach however took the post-hardcore namesake and put it to good use. Between the mid to late nineties (and into the millennium) Breach produced several good albums further enhancing the genre, certain members of the band would later form the Post-Metal/Avant-Garde group Terra Tenebrosa. With this release however Breach took things to the next level. It's me God, is an incredible display of musicianship and vocal ability, you certainly haven't heard Post-Hardcore done right like this since Fugazi's days. Each track gives it's own signature sound, some more sludgy and abrasive others more with the post-rock aesthetic, all in all it leads to plenty of tumultuous climaxes throughout the album which gives the listener more the reason to check out their other releases, which this reviewer highly recommends.

Download (Zippyshare)


Monday 6 January 2014

2014 in music: week one

The purpose of these posts will be to briefly detail the releases in 2014 as they come out.

Before I start, it should be noted that I haven't yet heard albums by Lvcifyre, Persuader, Skull Fist or Hail Spirit Noir, hence their non-inclusion here. Also note that any description here might be completely wrong - they are mostly from memory of one or two listens.

Thrash is looking a lot more promising in 2014 than it did at this time in 2013 (and remained so throughout the year): although the split between Sodom and Hirax, perhaps the only big-name thrash release so far this year, is ultimately disappointing, with Sodom doing more of the same old shit and Hirax producing nothing memorable, there have been two more-than-decent releases from new bands. Firstly, Nuclear Omnicide's Bringers of Disease EP is very promising, fundamentally sounding like a slightly cleaner-produced version of Darkness Descends with hints of Agent Orange. The other is Phantom's Triumph of Death EP. The band wears their influences quite prominently on their sleeves, not only with covers of Sodom and Destruction, but also with references to Hellhammer, Celtic Frost and Venom with the EP title, and songs (not covers) called 'Dethroned Emperor' and 'Raise the Dead' respectively. Believe me, it's a tasty concoction.

Black metal is also looking decent. ROTS' The Night the Trees Burnt is probably the most exciting thing so far this year, offering a blackened take on the type of deafening, huge-sounding, slightly grinding sludge (if you can even call it that) exemplified by things like Rorcal's album last year. Abbotoir also offer a solid piece of funeral doom on their Reclaim EP, a single, 26-minute piece, the closest point of reference for which is probably Esoteric*. Nazghor offer a piece of black metal which can't decide whether it wants to ape Dissection or mid-period Darkthrone while forgetting that chucking all your longest songs on the end of a release probably isn't the greatest idea for listenability. Sammath's Godless Arrogance is pretty dull - by-the-numbers European black metal. Finally, Razörschrieck have Depressionnaire, the sole depressive BM EP of the myriad offerings thus far this year. It's pretty varied, which is refreshing for the genre, but nothing in it really stands out as excellent, or good even.

Of the two punk releases I've heard so far this year, Doom's Corrupt Fucking System is by far the best (and I'm counting it as a 2014 release due to the date of physical release). Perhaps closer to their roots than anything in a long time, it's a triumphant return for the crust legends after an 8 year absence. The other is Backstabbers Inc's M.I.A., which, contrary to the expectations you might gain based on the band name and album title, is not a beatdown hardcore album. It's modern d-beat with occasional grind influences. It hasn't struck me as excellent yet but I've got a feeling it's a grower. Solid Discharge cover too.

Of the stuff from other genres (which I haven't heard two releases from), Cimmerian's Hollowing is okay, which is a compliment as to me, progressive melodic death metal pretty much sounds like the worst thing ever. If the rest of the album was as good as 'Among Ghosts, We Slept', it would be an excellent release. The Fleshtones' Wheel of Talent is decent garage rock but nothing to write home about. Gum's But Woman Monkey sounds like fairly good stoner doom in the Electric Wizard vein with hints of Crowbar (which I could do without), but probably needs more listens to sink in properly. Jaldaboath's The Further Adventures... is the gimmicky shit one would expect from this band. Finally, the split between Exhumed and Iron Reagan shows Exhumed releasing more of the same fairly mediocre deathgrind they've been making all their career with perhaps a few nods to early Suicidal Tendencies and a poor interpretation of Minor Threat, with Iron Reagan doing the polar opposite in terms of quality and sounding the way Municipal Waste should have sounded.

Album of the week: Doom - Corrupt Fucking System

Here's an 8tracks mix to sample this stuff.



*The band are included in the black metal section because there haven't been any other doom albums I've heard.