Well shit, here I am. I’m definitely shocked that I came all the way up to this point from my adventure, considering how much I didn’t want to do a chronological listening journey when I established my hyperfixation for this band, to taking multiple breaks along the journey, and having that hyperfixation diminish into the air. Despite all that, I never felt like I wanted to quit this journey all together, while I did stray away from the journey, I felt self-pressured into continuing ... read more
Escaping from the last sub-series and drudging through the three final pieces, “Total Bliss” serves as a great respark of what once was special within their last apocalyptic adventurous album “Weed Problem II - V”. While Bull of Heaven’s last era before the revival was generally pretty good, I feel like “Weed Problem II - V” set my standards up more higher for this era just for me to be bummed a bit by how little the rest of the era focuses and twists ... read more
“MONDAY, 10:27 AM” *BEEP*
Uhm—hello? Ahem…
Up to this point in their discography, there hasn’t been a piece so far that I can truly say that has an actual complex story—talking about being carried by the spoken word passages—inside of it. Sure, there were some close examples like “Reasoning in State Hospital”, “A Lovely Pear” and “A White Surveillance Van” but they weren’t all too much the main focus of the ... read more
Their 5th piece, “A Lovely Pear”—without any pretentious writing—is beautiful. What can I really say? For something like Bull of Heaven, “A Lovely Pear” is a deviation from the dark drone railroad, rather striking you in your heart within its mere 12-minute length. This emotional venture into their music isn’t all too new, which is clearly shown by “He Is Not Dead, but Sleepeth” and its depressing 2-note melody, but never in their ... read more
After about 3-pieces, Bull of Heaven strikes a good ol’ home-run with their bleakest piece yet; a looping tape decaying into madness. There’s something about “Reasoning in State Hospital” that is just so unique for its time, of course you got the fact that the hypnotism is now presented in a more accessible format of a Tabla Drum Machine that Neil Keener played during the early years of Bull of Heaven, but there’s the other element that looms over this piece that ... read more
After their outlandishly experimental “Weed Problem” that kickstarted the whole band, they followed this ‘continuously droning guitar’ fiasco in a more strained manner than the previously unsettling and freakish atmosphere that came straight out of “Weed Problem”. But for anyone going for this blindly without any reviews to help, this could’ve probably been some dark scary ambience that would explore much deeper than their debut, but it’s the ... read more
Before having to get to the meat and the bones of Bull of Heaven and their debut album, “Weed Problem” which kickstarted the whole band and their numbered series fiasco, we really need to look at how they went up to this point in history. Despite what Clayton Counts responded in the Musique Machine interview about how they got into repetition in the first place, saying that “we're both fans of minimalism and drone, and have been since long before we met”, it is ... read more
Starting from late April to eventually ending on the third day of May in 2025—which equates to about a week, the same timeframe as Bull of Heaven’s “The Wicked Cease From Struggling”—I took the challenge to conquer each and every lasting hour of Bull of Heaven’s mighty “Even to the Edge of Doom”, which mind you is 24-hours. While it did seem like it was going to progressively get more boring as it progressed slowly through each hour down the ... read more
typical poserdum: They should make Donald Trump listen to the new Vince Staple's album!!! Vince Staples is the modern Kendrick Lamar!!!!
real elitist true kvlt mindset: Ooooho my butthole shines like a laser ooohoohooo
It’s funny for a communist grifter like JPEGMAFIA to rip apart Earl Sweatshirt and The Alchemist for always making “the same song” then proceeding to shit out what seems to be a recycled song from his previous album with no evolution at all. To me, Babygirl sounds like a much weaker version of what he had already done on Don't Rely on Other Men but without the spark that made Don't Rely on Other Men so special. Pretty unfortunate for a guy like JPEGMAFIA to progress ... read more
Pretty darn acceptable and experimental than the previous single, wish that JPEGMAFIA would actually talk politics on this track especially with the Palestine, Israel and Iran situation.
Putrefaction in Progress was so strong of an album that it had Last Days of Humanity go back to their previous Goregrind sound, I ain't complaining though. You can't outdo what Putrefaction in Progress did and Last Days of Humanity definitely knew that from the start.
Short, not sweet and definitely not delicious, but amazing Gorenoise.
I might end up like this guy on the cover if they keep throwing basketballs at me. Stop it!!!
The pure magnum opus of music, any number of albums before and after this can be deemed inferior to what Putrefaction in Progress has done for the music landscape. The real poser filter to scram away any amateur pussy TheNeedleDrop fan and the average Pop music fan, inviting only the upmost patient and fucked up to appreciate its beauty.
Or, maybe it's good. I don't know.
I've been scammed, I was expecting purely Goregrind and got some regular ass music thrown in some sections, stupid liars.
The first recommended album for this bizarre little list, recommended to me by Immade0fg0ld (on rym), and just looking at the genres and the fact that Galactic Hole presumably had a role in the famous SiIvaGunner channel, I know I am sure to be in something of a treat; which obviously I was proven right. Piracies Menu seems to be a fun little danceable Ghettotech Plunderphonics album that frequently changes without ruining the pace, throwing shit at the wall constantly in a really fun way to ... read more