Dissonant downer rawk from 1991. The sub-rosa alchemy brewed by this Florida trio was nothing short of captivating.
Sunday, May 31, 2015
Look at all the people...
Dissonant downer rawk from 1991. The sub-rosa alchemy brewed by this Florida trio was nothing short of captivating.
Nai Harvest - Hairball (2015, Top Shelf) - A brief overview.
Yes, Thompson's searing guitar leads and echoey vocals spark that much of a visceral charge, aided and abetted of course by Currie's propulsive pounding. Hairball's ten selections are spewed in a plethora of frayed and frantic tangents, somehow staying ensconced in the melodious framework Nai Harvest manage to keep them corralled in. "Sick on My Heart," "Dive In," and the heaving title cut are breathless, punky barn-burners to die for. This frenzied ante is tamped down a notch on tuneful, mid-tempo benders "Drinking Bleach" and "Buttercups" both of which jibe into more streamlined indie-rock environs. As for the quality ratio, this disk runs the gamut from at minimum good to thoroughly grand, while never encroaching into the grandiose. This Hairball is sure to be hurled into my top-ten albums tally for 2015. Utterly glorious stuff.
It can all be experienced firsthand on their Soundcloud page. Make sure to grab a hard copy direct from Top Shelf Records, or get your fix from Bandcamp, iTunes or Amazon.
Saturday, May 30, 2015
V/A - 4 on the Floor 7" ep (1993, C/Z)
01. Treepeople - Boiled Bird
02. Dirt Fishermen - Soy Cheese
03. Gnome - Crush
04. Alcohol Funnycar - Push
Hear
Friday, May 29, 2015
The Meices - Tastes Like Chicken (1994)
Instead, their indigenous formula hinged on Reineke's throaty howl (teetering ever so precariously on the border of a whine), a Jerry-rigged delivery system, and as far as TLC is concerned, some near-startling dynamics. The proof is in a bevy of feral, ragin' slammers, including but not limited to "Lettuce is Far Out," "The Big Shitburger" (aka "Sister"), "Until the Weekend." The key to ...Chicken's charm is producer Kurt Bloch's (yes, from the Fastbacks) acumen for the capturing the Meices raw, ferocious live sound in the studio, especially Reineke's guitar and Marc Turner's kinetic percussion. Sonically, the warm analog hue that envelopes the proceedings is just as vital. And if the uptempo numbers are at all grating on your eardrums, by album's end there are a pair of mellower, not to mention thoughtful respites in the form of "Hopin' For a Ride" and "Now." I've dedicated entries to several other morsels in the Meices catalog, all of which you're welcome to check out here. Finally, I'd be remiss if I failed to point out this record's bizarre album sleeve, that only a decade like the '90s could have induced.
01. That Good One
02. Daddy's Gone to California
03. All Time High
04. Light 'em Up
05. Slide
06. Until the Weekend
07. Lettuce is Far Out
08. The Big Shitburger (aka Sister)
09. Untruly
10. Hopin' for a Ride
11. Now
12. That Other Good One
Hear
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
The Conditionz - Cream Soda Throw Rug (1987, Primal Lunch)
Now on Bandcamp
Tuesday, May 26, 2015
Girlpope - "Teenage Jesus" 7" (1995, P22)
After Girlpope's self-imposed excommunication, frontman Mark Norris parlayed his talents via a new crew dubbed the Backpeddlers.
A. Teenage Jesus
B. She
Hear
Sunday, May 24, 2015
This planet's in a shambles, I'm having fun...
Dick Diver - Melborne, Florida (2015, Trouble in Mind) - a brief overview
Nowhere screamingly obvious to be honest. In fact it isn't easy to make generalizations about these fellows (and fell-ette Stephanie Hughes) though a good brunt of the text dedicated to them on other outlets make a big to-do about the quartet's jangly guitar tones (courtesy of McKay and Rupert Edwards). True that, but sonically, Dick Diver's sweet, clangy chords don't dominate so much as embellish, most effectively on Melbourne, Florida's more extroverted numbers "Tearing the Posters Down" and "Waste the Alphabet." That facet carries over more subtly onto "Leftovers," where trumpets and sax likewise filter their way into the mix. Later in, D/D play it up casually and smooth on "Percentage Points," while the going gets more insular and intimate on the acoustic "Boomer Class." It's apparent that all four participants here contribute to lead vocals, but frustratingly the sleeve notes don't specify who's fronting the mic from song to song. What I can tell you is that whomever is getting face-time on "Beat Me Up" and "Competition" simply isn't in his natural element. When all is said done, Melbourne, Florida (D/D's third album, btw) functions as a loose patchwork of styles and pastiches, more seamlessly stitched together in portions than others. Dick Driver's modest and meager indie-pop tenor nonetheless manages to yield magnificence when all the right components congeal.
Melbourne, Florida is available from all the usual suspects: iTunes, Amazon, Bandcamp, Chapter Music and direct from Trouble in Mind. A North American tour will ensue this July.
Wednesday, May 20, 2015
The Farewell Party - Here (1988, Principe Logique)
01. Terez Batista
02. James
03. Things Behind the Sun
04. Complete True Citizens of the World
05. Where Clouds Lie
06. Girl on the Ledge
07. Promise of Rain
08. Here (Letter to America)
09. Runaway Horses
10. Waterland
Hear
Monday, May 18, 2015
Mystery Monday do-over.
Saturday, May 16, 2015
Enemies - Products of the Street ep (1980, Raw)
01. Products of the Street
02. Test Tube Baby
03. Disconnected
04. X-Ray Spex
05. Degeneration
06. Deborah
Hear
Wednesday, May 13, 2015
American Standard - Wonderland (1989) & Trial Size 7" (1994, Maggadee)
American Standard didn’t come close to ascending to the popularity of say, Bad Religion, Naked Raygun or Gorilla Biscuits, but their sole album from the ‘80s, Wonderand, parallels the substance and excitability of the aforementioned. As for A/S's own influences these guys tore a page or two from Dag Nasty and latter day Government Issue without resorting to sheer plagiarism, like maybe...Face to Face? Wonderland is an absolute scorcher and deserved a wider audience. In an attempt to give the record a bigger reach, Another Planet reissued it in 1996 with an alternate sleeve, which I thought was nothing short of pitiful. I'm offering it here with the original cover.
1995 saw the release of their second album, Piss and Vinegar, which was preceded by the Trial Size 7." At this stage in the game the band conceded a considerable amount to the prevailing trend du jour, virtually rendering them American Standard in name only. Make of it what you will. Finally, Blogged and Quartered are sharing a collection of proto-Wonderland A/S rarities which is well worth your investigation.
Wonderland
01. It Comes Around
02. Building Blocks
03. Without Asking Why
04. Grin
05. 4510
06. Thank You
07. Away
08. Should've Known
09. Superficial
10. So Much
Trial Size 7"
A. Petting Zoo
B. Winding Down
Hear
Tuesday, May 12, 2015
Fire in the Radio - Telemetry (2015, Wednesday) - A brief overview.
The reddish rubber band "planet" adorning Telemetry's album jacket isn't exactly a harbinger of what awaits the listener. Instead of the loose, pull-a-band-and-it-all-unravels premise it portends, that makeshift rubber ball actually runs contrary to Fire's eminently powerful solidity. Almost as if their Y2K-era debut never happened, Telemetry is exponentially more decisive and bolder, not to mention devastatingly tuneful as-all-get-out on "Best Shot" and "Ghost to Haunt You." Song for song Fire in the Radio harness the kind of lean, mean incisiveness to set transistors ablaze as their metaphorical namesake implies. Informed by Alkaline Trio, Jimmy Eat World, and too a lesser extent a bevy of crunchy indie rawkers like the Doughboys and Big Drill Car, FitR are too crafty for the Warped Tour midway, yet wouldn't sound a hair out of place straddling the stage at your local gin mill. To a handful of us hanger-oners, Telemetry is tantamount to a quantum-leap comeback, but to the world at large this disk serves as a galvanizing introduction.
Purchase Telemetry straight from Wednesday Records or Bandcamp or Amazon or iTunes. You can check out one Telemetry selection below, along with a demo from their Soundcloud page.
Best Shot
Motorboat (Motor Boys and Girls) demo
http://www69.zippyshare.com/v/43kaqgCa/file.html
Sunday, May 10, 2015
Where has your sweet smile gone to now?
Saturday, May 9, 2015
The Comsat Angels - Unravelled (Dutch vers.) (1994, Crisis)
As some of you more astute W/O readers may have noticed, I've made several references to the Comsat Angels (aka C.S. Angels and Com-sat Angels) over the years on these pages but have failed to actually feature any of their music. This is part and parcel due to their catalog having been kept in print in one incarnation or another, and in fact, their first five albums are set for expanded reissues (some for the umpteenth time I might add) this spring on Edsel. Most CSA acolytes will extoll the virtues of their first three LPs the most: Waiting for a Miracle (1980), Sleep No More (1981), and Fiction (1982). I'm no different, and quite frankly who can blame me? That trifecta of melodic, textured and not infrequently melancholic albums possessed a slyly subterranean mystique that only post-punk rock from that era could seem to muster. So much so I was afraid of listening/purchasing anything the Comsat's related after Fiction, based on the sheer number of negative reviews I read, which invariably faulted the band's embrace of a noticeably more commercial modus operendi.
After 1986's Chasing Shadows, the band took the rest of the decade off, returning in 1992 with My Mind's Eye, and thankfully with much of their credibility restored. The low-key Unravelled followed two years later. Not a proper album in the least, Unravelled was a compilation of Mind's Eye-era radio sessions, marketed largely to Holland, where the Comsat's had a particularly strong foothold.
Though not quite "unplugged," the versions of the songs presented are markedly more lucid and stripped down, with an unsurprising emphasis being placed on the recent Mind's Eye material. While they're at it, the band stretch back to their halcyon days with early chestnuts like "After the Rain," "Our Secret," and their career defining "Eye of the Lens" all undergoing the refurbished treatment. In case you wish to be further enlightened, mondo Comast's fan and Big Takeover editor Jack Rabid has the final say on this release over at Allmusic. By the way, there are two different versions of Unravelled, this one being the Dutch edition. I will hopefully have more C.S. Angels goodies to share in the not-too-distant future.
01. After the Rain
02. Beautiful Monsters
03. The Cutting Edge
04. Field of Tall Flowers
05. SS100X
06. Our Secret
07. Always Near
08. Eye of the Lens
09. Storm of Change
10. Audrey in Denim
11. Citadel
Thursday, May 7, 2015
The Velveteens - Tall House ep (1986, Ransom)
01. Tall House
02. Love as a Rule
03. Tired of the Beat
04. Flies
05. Moonwork
Hear
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
The Bullets - Power Chords and Promises (1987, Slum City)
01. That Certain Glow
02. Just Another Crime
03. Independence Day Charm
04. Walk On
05. Today and Today
06. untitled
07. A Minute or Two
08. Fact or Fiction
09. Macy
10. Vale da Morte
11. Lost But Not Found
Hear
Sunday, May 3, 2015
Four eps.
Saturday, May 2, 2015
Compulsion - Comforter + bonus disc (1994, One Little Indian)
In addition to the already generous fifteen track Comforter, certain European versions were paired with a bonus disk of eleven songs composed of two early Compuslion eps, a self-titled 1992 effort, and Casserole which followed a year later. To my knowledge these were initially only available on vinyl. Perhaps some Compulsion b-sides to follow.
Comforter
01. Rapejacket
02. Delivery
03. Mall Monarchy
04. Ariande
05. Late Again
06. Air-raid for the Neighbors
07. Why Do we Care?
08. Yancy Dangerfield's delusions
09. Lovers
10. I Am John's Brain
11. Eating
12. Dick, Dale, Rick and Ricky
13. Domestique
14. Oh My Fool Life
15. Jean Could be Wrong
bonus cd
01. Final Time
02. Rapejacket
03. Easterman
04 Ninefourth
05. Purring Not Laughing
06. Accident Ahead
07. Yabba Yabba Yes Yes Yes
08. Crying
09. How Do I Breathe?
10. Here Comes Ambrose Beasley
11. Security
Hear