Supercrush by Blush
Simultaneously noisy and melodious, bright and sappy, catchy and novel, Supercrush by Blush unites the most potent pop elements of shoegaze, slowcore, and noise rock to create a record that won’t leave your weekly rotation anytime soon.
Metal Roundup 10/13
Metal roundups always bring the heat, but this week’s seems even more heavy than usual. Friday the 13th really brought the darkness out in the metal scene!
Angel Tape by Islaja
In many cases, our childhood memories are ones that stay with us. Even if subconsciously these early experiences influence our neural pathways, informing our future decisions and creative tastes. Finnish composer Islaja takes a deeply thoughtful approach to reflection in Angel Tape.
Dance Roundup Week of 10/22
From the conventional to the downright strange, the world of underground dance gave us no shortage of music to move to this week!
Destroyer by Justin Walter
Though Justin Walter maintains all the same technical chops as these people who are continually swinging for the fences, Walter chooses instead to create a miniature landscape, tending to each minute detail to bring the brightest luster out of the dimmest materials.
RITUAL / HABIT / CEREMONY by John Dwyer
Experimental music often leaves plenty of room for listener interpretation, which allows for a more intuitive approach to challenging questions. And for a deeply conceptual record like RITUAL / HABIT / CEREMONY by John Dwyer of Osees, the felt presence of direct experience is highly encouraged.
Atrocity Machine by Body Void
Like a long-term nuclear waste warning message, Atrocity Machine uses sharp, evocative imagery to show that nothing good lies ahead on our current path.
Ragdoll Dance by Institute
Insistent 16th note bass lines with bright, washed-out guitars charge forward alongside indifferent vocals, Ragdoll Dance’s lyrics and old school punk attitudes retrofitted for a 2020s audience.
Attachment Figure by Sarah Morrison
Somewhat operating within the vocal pop tradition of Weyes Blood, Morrison writes songs as extended poems with few choruses or hooks, assigning a set of unique musical motifs to each stanza to give her songs the feeling of slowly drifting from one thought to another.
Price of Progress by SMILE
Price of Progress by SMILE, a relatively straightforward post-punk record that substitutes the genre’s typical washed-out singing for spoken, socially conscious poetry.
INSIDE NOISE: Week of 10/13
From experimental vocal jazz to energetic, action-packed afrobeat, this week’s popular releases had it all! Come dive in with us!
Cells Impact by Easymind & oddeen
Rage generally motivates the mic in hip hop, but a far more menacing, brooding, pure negativity permeates the sound of Cells Impact by Easymind and oddeen.
Dance Roundup Week of 10/06
From the conventional to the downright strange, the world of underground dance gave us no shortage of music to move to this week!
Regressions by Numb.er
Originally written while the artist was living alone in a foreign city and revamped following the onset of the pandemic, this dark wave post punk release exemplifies melancholy both instrumentally and lyrically.
Metal Roundup Week of 10/06
We saw a ton of fantastic releases this week, but the real winners may be the diehard extreme metal fans. Here’s our breakdown of the amazing new material that came out this week!
New World Artifacts by Unschooling
Unschooling is clearly confident enough to experiment, feverishly stitching together familiar influences with an energetic yet lofi sound that inspires repeated listening.
The Map and the Territory by EXEK
For all of the gothic-tinged post punk we’ve been seeing recently, bands like EXEK that take the same sensibilities in a more experimental, kraut-rock-oriented direction feel ever more refreshing.
The Ineffable Consequence of Dreaming by Worm Hero
The sound of cosmic music is revived and redefined on The Ineffable Consequence of Dreaming, the latest release from UK spacegrind act Worm Hero.
Electrons libres du quebec by Population II
Population II doesn’t solve the fundamental tension within the Quebecois spirit, but their meditation on the issue excites all of our longings to belong and exposes the way in which our Anglophone North American culture harms all of us, even if we grew up immersed in it.
Badway by Sonic Jesus
Badway identifies vague threats to human wellbeing and responds with the equally scattered will to fight back, acknowledging the absurdly uphill battle that lies ahead to deal with issues of atomization, public health, and industry greed.