Bog People – Dark Skies

Bog People releases December 29th via Iron Lung Records.

Dartz – Learning To Drive With Dad

Dangerous Day To Be A Cold One releases March 1st via Flying Nun Records.

Wasted Denim – Rats & Freaks

Wasted Denim releases December 15th.

Island Apes – Stitt

Island Apes releases January 26th via God Unknown Records.

Some Remain – Knuckle Sandwich

Dead Sound​/​Knuckle Sandwich 7″ releases February 12th via Blowtorch Records.

Mould – Birdsong

The Abdo Men – Ulcer Anthology: Laff Your Way To Total Destruction

Whatever there is to be found out about this Cincinnati, Ohio group is cloaked in a veil of uncertainty, not helped in the least by that kinda stereotypical “loser band” history given on this cassette’s bandcamp page. So, probably, there are folks known from groups like The Serfs, The Drin, Crime of Passing and Motorbike at work here and at least some of the songs on this can be traced back to the year 2019, when they first appeared on the Pedestrian Sentiments EP. Otherwise i’m really not too sure if any of the details given are to be believed. You can’t argue with the music though, which kicks ass from start to finish, in some way evoking the aesthetics, varying fidelity and stylistic variety of golden era Guided By Voices, otherwise roughly oscillating between jangly power pop in the vein of, say, Bed Wettin’ Bad Boys or Bad Sports in tracks like Coward Of The State, Wannabe (A Star) and Silver Queen; grimy psychedelic garage rock (Didn’t Win The Lottery, Obnoxious And A Neu) as well as a couple of catchy melodic garage punk smashers carrying the signature of groups á la Booji Boys, Tyvek and Parquet Courts. It’s Been A Bad Week kinda resembles the garage-drenched noise aesthetics of A Place To Bury Strangers, Peyton’s Kids has sort of a Woolen Men feel to it and throughout, the folk-infused post punk of earlier Chronophage comes to mind more than once.

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Tyvek – Overground

Always a thing of beauty, a new LP by Detroit’s wildly influential pioneers of the mid-aughts to 2010s wave of US garage punk groups. The first thing catching your ear on this one is the added saxophone of Emily Roll, adding s slightly different kind of texture to this release. Otherwise, this is the signature Tyvek sound we all know and love, made up of kinda simplistic yet equally razor sharp riffs and hooks counteracted by their somewhat loose and sloppy, relaxed and strummy presentation, all of which surley served as an inspiration to later groups of the Strange Attractor, Parquet Courts, Shark Toys or UV Race variety!

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