Nag & Astio - Split

A neat split re­lease via Berlin's order05records. The open­ing track by At­lanta post punk in­sti­tu­tion Nag sur­pris­es with some synth-equipped psy­che­del­ic vibes á la Mononeg­a­tives or some lat­er stuff by Use­less Eaters, while det­o­nat­ing an­oth­er charge of their rough and abra­sive sound we've come to know and love in the oth­er song. On the flip­side then, Italy's As­tio com­ple­ment the son­ic as­sault with a slight­ly more con­ven­tion­al but no less classy, ma­ture make of mod­er­ate­ly melod­ic old­school post punk en­er­gy, the kind we've heard be­fore from the likes of Crim­i­nal Code, Sieve­head or, more re­cent­ly, Pyrex, Body Main­te­nance or Sched­ule 1.

Al­bum-Stream →

Bad/​/​Dreems - Hoo Ha!

This Ade­laide group has been around for well over a decade by now, yet it al­most ap­pears as if they've fi­nal­ly found their own groove just now on LP num­ber four - or at the very least i can say, hav­ing tak­en a per­func­to­ry glance over their pre­vi­ous records, that their newest one is play­ing in a dif­fer­ent league al­to­geth­er as every­thing here from the song­writ­ing to the arrange­ments and pro­duc­tion smooth­ly as­sem­bles in­to a way more re­al­ized vi­sion while keep­ing things in­ter­est­ing with plen­ty of styl­is­tic va­ri­ety. I'm re­mind­ed of a whole bunch of oth­er Aus­tralian groups in the garage-/post punk spec­trum, among which are garage-/pub rock-lean­ing acts á la Mi­ni Skirt, Hideous Sun De­mon and Pist Id­iots, post punk/-core acts like Bat­piss, Bench Press or Rip Room aswell as some traces of clas­sics from the likes of ('80s) Sci­en­tists and The New Crists.

Al­bum-Stream →

Smirk - Smirk

Fol­low­ing their most am­bi­tious record so far in last year's Ma­te­r­i­al LP, which ex­pand­ed the son­ic pal­lette out in­to the weird­er fringes of some­what Des­per­ate Bi­cy­cles-lean­ing art punk and al­so fea­tured some of the most in­fec­tious pow­er pop song­writ­ing of that year, the newest 7" by Nick Vic­ario aka Smirk, who's al­so known as a mem­ber of Pub­lic Eye, Cri­sis Man und Ce­men­to among oth­ers, keeps things com­par­a­tive­ly sim­ple and straight­for­ward this time while his heav­i­ly sam­ple-backed songs and arrange­ments still un­err­ing­ly hit their mark every sin­gle time.

Al­bum-Stream →

Exwhite - This Is Future

Last year's steam­roller of a (mini-)LP named Estray is a tough act to fol­low up for sure but the (prob­a­bly) Leipzig/Ber­lin-based group man­ages to do so ad­mi­arably well on their newest al­bum, re­tain­ing all of their pre­vi­ous qual­i­ties while ex­pand­ing their garage punk sound with quite a bit of an abra­sive noise rock edge which re­minds me a lot of NY noise-/garage punk act Brandy and ear­li­er Sci­ence Man. A good deal of melod­ic pop smash­ers á la Wouldn't You, Fo­mo or Get Clean is still present here so fans of that catchy, some­what Boo­ji Boys-es­que pow­er pop won't feel duped ei­ther.

Al­bum-Stream →

Scooter Jay - Jaywalking

A de­light­ful batch of laid-back, off-kil­ter psy­che­del­ic- and garage punk good­ness by a Toron­to group. These tunes do have some slight US pro­to punk vibe to them in ad­di­tion to pret­ty un­mis­tak­able space-/acid rock lean­ings, kin­da like a mix be­tween re­cent LPs by Jean Mignon, Peace de Ré­sis­tance or old­er stuff like Faux Fe­ro­cious, even some ear­ly White Fence - with plen­ty of egg­punk weird­ness on top. What's not to like?

Al­bum-Stream →

Fantasma - Demo

A smart and in­tri­cate­ly con­struct­ed mix­ture of Post Punk, Noise Rock and Post­core is be­ing set off by this New York group on this plain­ly phe­nom­e­nal de­mo. There's no way around ad­dress­ing the ele­phant in the room though: This re­minds me a lot of Straw Man Army - es­pe­cial­ly of their first LP - but you could do a lot worse than be­ing com­pared to a band of such stature, right? Friends of Bloody Gears, Fara­quet, Meat Wave and such will al­so get a kick out of this.

Brick Head - Bricks For Brains

As i un­der­stand, Brick Head is the so­lo project of Sarah Hardi­man who's al­so play­ing in Deaf Wish, Moon Rit­u­als and a bunch of oth­er groups you might've heard of. Fol­low­ing a still some­what shaky de­but al­bum, the over­all vi­sion comes in­to much sharp­er fo­cus here as all the parts just click in­to place on this one, in­ter­weav­ing fa­mil­iar styles and flour­ish­es in­to an ul­ti­mate­ly quite unique ex­pe­ri­ence. Car­riy­ing the hall­marks of a num­ber of aus­tralian groups, the first things to come to mind are var­i­ous in­car­na­tions of Alien Nose­job, the straight­for­ward garage punk of Ed­dy Cur­rent Sup­pres­sion Ring, the min­i­mal­ism of The UV Race while over the course of the record, a kin­da hazy, melan­cholic melod­i­cism á la Kitchen's Floor in­creas­ing­ly takes cen­ter stage.

Al­bum-Stream →

Pyrex - Pyrex

Ex­cel­lent shit as usu­al via To­tal Punk. This New York group's de­but LP cer­tain­ly won't open a new chap­ter for pitch black post punk, yet it man­ages to cap­ti­vate nonethe­less, by means of sheer force and in­ten­si­ty rather than fi­nesse, charg­ing up a sound fa­mil­iar to fans of, say, Crim­i­nal Code, Sieve­head or Rank/​Xerox with a raw en­er­gy akin to At­lanta groups Nag and Preda­tor, some of the psy­che­del­ic un­der­cur­rents of stuff á la Pub­lic In­ter­est, Waste Man or Pub­lic Eye.

Al­bum-Stream →

Display Homes - What If You're Right And They're Wrong?

Sad­ly over­shad­owed by the death of their their gui­tar play­er Dar­rell, the Syd­ney group's first LP via Er­ste Theke sig­ni­fies a ma­jor leap in qual­i­ty af­ter their al­ready quite en­joy­able pre­vi­ous E.T.A. EP, show­cas­ing the band as a much tighter unit de­liv­er­ing their sim­ple but ef­fec­tive, al­ways catchy and dance­able blend of time­less post punk with im­pres­sive pre­ci­sion and con­fi­dence. As be­fore, there's plen­ty of Py­lon groove and en­er­gy con­tained in here while at dif­fer­ent points you might al­so find sim­i­lar­i­ties to con­tem­po­rary acts such as Lithics, Pinch Points, Rank/​Xerox, Slumb Par­ty or Nots, with oc­ca­sion­al flash­es of Pix­ies-es­que surf-ish gui­tar leads.

Al­bum-Stream →

Mononegatives - Crossing Visual Field

A whole bar­rage of dig­i­tal sin­gles in re­cent weeks al­ready ap­peared to fore­shad­ow a new record by the Lon­don, On­tario group and in­deed here it is, their sec­ond LP in all its glo­ry, car­ry­ing an ex­cel­lent new batch of their quite dis­tinct, catchy as hell, al­ways slight­ly off-kil­ter and quirky genre mix­ture con­tain­ing el­e­ments of garage-, post- and synth punk, space- and psy­che­del­ic rock. You might com­pare some bits and pieces here to such groups as Pow!, Use­less Eaters and of course the re­cent col­lab­o­ra­tion Telegenic Plea­sures which al­so fea­tures some of the band mem­bers at work here - at this point though, i'd say they're pret­ty much carved out their own, in­stant­ly rec­og­niz­able lit­tle niche.

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