Pedigree – Runaway

Run Away releases September 30th.

Famous Mammals – Instant Pop Expressionism Now!

I gotta say, following up on a promising but still somewhat undercooked and inconsistent debut tape from two years ago, i’m kinda blown away by the hypnotic pull of this second album by an Oakland (?) group having among their ranks members of a whole bunch of household numbers – The World, Andy Human and the Reptoids, Rays and Violent Change might just be the most familiar names among those for longtime watchers of this space, but these are just the tip of the iceberg really. While you can plausibly pick out some similarities to all these groups, i’m way more reminded of the relaxed post- and garage punk of australian groups UV Race and Wireheads, enhanced with some flavor of british psychedelia (Vital Idles come to mind as a contemporary reference), even a smidge of Wire and early Barrett-era Pink Floyd in Let The Light In. Just as well though, they might have drawn plenty of inspiration from ’70s-’80s british DIY culture with groups á la Membranes, Swell Maps, Mekons and Desperate Bicycles being the closest comparisons i can pull out of my ass right now.

Album-Stream →

Dennis Cometti – Suburban Condition

Suburban Condition releases August 11th via Bargain Bin Records.

Beef – Beef

Beef releases August 4th via Feel It Records & Let’s Pretend Records.

Texture Freq – Masochistic Episode

A beautifully overwhelming mud shower of noise-infested Postcore, the debut EP of this Minneapolis group clearly inheriting some of the DNA of the city’s own Noise Rock-related history while feeling perfectly contemporary all the same, mainly reminding me of recent bands á la Dollhouse, Launcher, Mystic Inane, Wymyns Prysyn and Optic Nerve… with a touch of Hot Snakes thrown in for good measure.

Album-Stream →

Snooper – Super Snõõper

At first glance i couldn’t help but feel a bit disappointed by the lack of new material on the Nashville group’s debut LP but then again, i can’t say these new recordings of songs mostly known from previous EPs don’t slap – they kick some serious ass, trading in some of the previous releases’ shambolic quirkiness for a bit more of a hardcore edge and while i’ve really grown fond of the EPs’ Lo-Fi aesthetics, there have also been some examples on these that never quite clicked with me in their earlier versions and its those songs that gain the most on this LP which is likely also a closer representation of the group’s current live sound, their shows having gained kind of a legendary reputation at this point. Can’t wait to see these folks tour Europe.

Album-Stream →

Inu – Fade Out

Don’t Eat Food releases October 6th via Mesh-Key Records.