Leaked together Earth-like repetitive riffs and John Cale of VU's groovy drone style, through the Psychic TV's lightness and love. May the main stages of the niche psychedelic music festivals shake with their rhythm.
The best murmuring on the scene now, that's true, the other signals were lost in transmission.
This band reflects everything good about Ireland, and obviously it is not u2. Bit trippy, parabolized, but also straightforward when needed (always). Their approach is so outsider-ish that they would never able to explain how this real-life tumblercore band turned to support act for the Cure (I'm proud of both). They still look teenage, and do what the young hearts should do - sing about ... read more
I want his story to be longer, and we all need it without knowing it.
This synthusiast playing songs of maleness, explaining the fragilities and the losts we feel from the eighties (when we were not born yet, I bet). His style is a rare reminder of the Wall of Voodoo and friends times, when the production and catchyness was a thing. The window of this time machine is open in his TikTok, get in and dive deep https://www.tiktok.com/@pleasurecraft
A few catchy songs (DM:AM, 1-800) in a bucket of full of self-pleasuring banalities of "evil".
Delta 5 or Los Microwaves still sounds more modern than that.
Thanks for Uncle Jeff's nephew should be proud of himself, he laughs and rocks in the underground like a train full of rats. The songs are sarcastic, and not another man could not stop talking bs like, the riffs and distorted sound bilts you with a muscular flipper and do not leave you behind to kick your bottoms a few extra times with a well-worn boot.
ffo: Nice Guy, Leather Slave, Smola, and other bands that do not have much fans
When you had time to record opera out of your bad trip notes - you should be proud of yourself.
Thanks to Dean for forcing Elias to take off his cowboy hat, and return to the urban area. Hope it's a step towards to a new Iceage record where our generation Nick Cave will have more punches.
Most of the people would lose their attention after the first c*mming, maybe the second one. The gurls are playing like they are Lydia Lunch's Only Fans, or Delta 5 or The Slits' or any other arousing band from the late 70s-early 80s pre-HIV low-bidget high-power bands. Hope they will release their "War Is Menstrual Envy" or so.
I was promised to have the Velvet Underground of 2020s, and got folkish ambient without any remarkable songs. Hope they had better records before.
The best reminder of sheet-fuck people exciting (no one would get a job wearing their t-shirt). The duo sounds like the naming a genre power violence is still a good thing to do, however, it is hope they will survive Pig Destroyer.
Knock-knock, the Locust, we are looking for An Albatross please send Some Girls to search in Head Wound City
Rock in Opposition to the bushy mountains. Reminds of avant prog and folkish noise rock, as well as shitgaze, but more of that performative art. Such a super power duo from France should be nice to see playing live.
Vertigo of the weirdly deafened basement noisecore. Should be great seeing live
It's really frustrating that I believed it's a new album by noise rock band Microwaves (https://microwaves.bandcamp.com/) due to a good sounding title and similar artwork. This petite bourgeoisie band is so flat and boring, so I can only explain the hype by your nostalgia for the same sounding bands with the silly 5 to 10 long words names exploiting the ascending chords.
an abstract meme pretending to be a music album (you do not have to get it if it does not make you h0rny)
This band has an art school vibe that ruins all the genres since white privileged British people started the colonization of music (I meant it started with the Beatles of course). This artsy approach makes it difficult to differentiate bands that reproduce the root music and the bands that play it. BCNR and black midi, and shame, and all of these so-called Brexit core are doing necrophilia or necromancy (also hard to differentiate) with the corpses of all the outsider 70-80s British bands that ... read more