Semele’s Tryst by Enchanted Forest
Expert sound design of this caliber means hours getting poured into each instrument, tirelessly ensuring that everything works well together and stands alone as a sonic object.
Inside Noise Week of 11/17
Jump into some of the most interesting popular musical releases of the week with us!
Elements by Toshimaru Nakamura and David Lee Myers
On paper, the NIMB and the Feedback Machine seem like the perfect tools to create impenetrable walls of harsh noise and heavy distortion, but Nakamura and Myers coax subdued tones and delicate melodies from their instruments.
Remains by Will Gardner
These constant interruptions to the album’s flow follow the contours of Gardner’s father’s journal entries, capturing the paranoia of someone aware that they’re in danger but completely unable to comprehend why and to what degree.
Death is Home by Aisha Devi
Cinematic in scale, these tracks convey a sense of complex interiority and contemplation, setting a ritualistic atmosphere that is better suited to inducing flow states than letting loose on the dance floor.
Sternkunst by Фламандская Школа (Flemish School)
Wringing out each idea to the maximum, Flemish School builds each rhythmic pattern into a full musical movement, resulting in these devastatingly heavy riffs that propel the esoteric, depressive lyrics forward.
Whiplash by Asha Sheshadri
With excerpts from famous writers, personal writing from the artist herself, ethnographic studies, voice memos, photography, and more, the project is a true experiment in sound collage.
Birdnoise by Sucks to Be You, Nigel
The dark, angular, abrasive bones of post rock have once again surfaced after decades of being subdued by indie crescendocore, greeting our doomed moment in history with its off-putting embrace.
I Was Too Young to Hear Silence by Patrick Shiroishi
More importantly, however, Shiroishi allows ample space for us to sit in this garage with him in silent pauses, hearing the sound slowly dispel across the concrete as the player gradually takes another breath.
Merkur Celluloid by Monument Zero
Where most dance music encourages you to lose yourself in the moment, Monument Zero implores us to remain vigilant at all times, always hyper aware of the ways we’ve been wronged and the ways we’ve been asked to wrong our neighbors.
Inside Noise Week of 11/10
We had some significant releases on the alternative side of pop music this week. Come check them out with us!
Portals by GRETA
Overtones and restrained ornamentation build energy pleasantly, adding depth while the project hones in on GRETA’s gentle, reassuring vocals. Fans of GEORGIA will appreciate Portals’s pop-skewed Braindance that occasionally leans towards a new age Enya-esque sound.
Dance Roundup Week of 11/3
As the weather gets colder and going to a sauna-like crowded club sounds more appealing, some new underground dance bangers are here to get us through the season.
Any Good Demon by Sterling Serpent
With twangy acoustic guitar and lap steel backed by darkwave synthscapes, Sterling Seperpent paints a picture of haunted desert plains, prodigal sons, and ill-fated lovers. Like a shadowy lone ranger, this album gallops off into a blood-red sunset, and we’re glad to be along for the ride.
Agenda 2010 by Gullibloon
Though history later subsumed this story as part of a worldwide movement towards market liberalization, artists like Gullibloon shout out from the back of the room, reminding us of the absurdity of a supposedly “socialist” party dismantling a nation’s welfare program.
Metal Roundup Week of 11/3
We don’t know what portal to the underworld has been opened, but this week in underground metal features lots of deep occult themes. Read-on for our top three picks below.
World Line, Eviscerated by Horse Torso
Our result crosses the weightless, immobile chords and harmonies of Slint with the bebop impulse to fly across the track with extended improvised melodies that still manage to act as lead lines.
Shelf Life by Animal Hospital
Like a mountain forming over layers and layers of sediment, each repetition adds an element of some sort, maybe a new harmony or instrument or synth buzzing, the sound of a door creaking. The individual ideas evolve together to create massive and compelling movements over the course of the track before fading away just as effortlessly as they built.
Nuntis by She the Throne
In Nuntis by She the Throne, the insanity of our current trajectory emerges via a series of oppressive industrial saw synths, explosive percussion, intense dynamic shifts, and unsettlingly accessible sung vocals.
The Comeback Kid by Marnie Stern
A decade since her last release, Marnie Stern returns to perfectly express the feeling of regression for the sake of progress in The Comeback Kid.