Album Reviews Michael Scharf Album Reviews Michael Scharf

Dissection Maps by Old Saw

Impossibly wide landscapes inhabited by looping folk instruments and densely atmospheric drones tell us the story of a society of blind ambition, a continual urge towards expansion before unsustainability inevitably begets tragedy.

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Album Reviews Michael Scharf Album Reviews Michael Scharf

Here I Am Where I Must Be by Alula Down

Each song examines a character reckoning with the onset of colonialism and capitalism, from a woman who feels more similar to the men who sail the world than the women they leave behind to an artisan whose priceless handiwork falls by the wayside as machines replace human hands.

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Album Reviews Michael Scharf Album Reviews Michael Scharf

Cosi Dentro Come Fuori by Porta d’Oro

Deliberately pulling back on the reins before the music spirals into overindulgence, these tracks prioritize acceptance and contentment ahead of jubilation, staying firmly rooted on the ground with positive melodies that remain spindly and narrow instead of escalating to an extravagant height.

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Album Reviews Michael Scharf Album Reviews Michael Scharf

Ridiculous and Full of Blood by Julie Christmas

Power strangles the world with a steel chain, from an economy that alienates us to interpersonal relationships that eviscerate our personhood. Julie Christmas shatters this chokehold on her terrifying new record Ridiculous and Full of Blood, a wholesale rejection of complacency in all facets of life.

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Album Reviews Michael Scharf Album Reviews Michael Scharf

Inner Light by Mark Templeton

Inner Light by Mark Templeton represents the death knell of this appropriationist era, chopping and screwing a series of flashy, shimmery christian meditation cassette tapes from the 70s and 80s to point out the absurdity of using such sounds in organized worship.

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Album Reviews Michael Scharf Album Reviews Michael Scharf

Para No Olvidarte by Clamor

Previously shelved as a historical relic, this sound reemerges in absolutely beautiful form on the new album Para No Olvidarte by Clamor, an ode to those early pioneers of what was then called “emocore” such as Rites of Spring, Embrace, and Dag Nasty.

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