This album is,,, weird. It fails to hold a consistent sonic profile; I often found myself confused, wondering if these songs should be on the same project. There are experimental rap and industrial passages with strange and intriguing production choices mangled with cookie-cutter rock and punk. The most compelling choice was the recurring rambling dystopian samples flying from ear to ear on several tracks. These junctures of grim deliberation were the only indications of cohesion amongst the ... read more
This record is silly, goofy music for goobers with leftist punk messaging. Playfully pulling together early pop punk (i.e., Descendents;) ska, and 'They Might Be Giants' nerd rock, The Dead Milkmen, create a surprisingly consistent and fun listen. Soul Rotation is nothing profound or innovative, but it isn't trying to be; the charm of this album is the only thing it needs to be worthwhile. I highly recommend giving it a shot; it's a grand old time.
This is as close to the second coming of Christ as we're gonna get. Cobain's guttural screams and otherworldly guitar tone combine to form a life-changing religious experience. The first time Scentless Apprentice graced my ears, I transcended a level of beinghood. Forget the cock and bull stories told in the Holy Bible; for on the 7th day, god created Nirvana.
The car won't start and I'm being very loud about it
Big guitar sound. Slightly unconventional vocals. This is all Juno needs.
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