Monday 12 December 2011

Jerkstore - Language Barrier cassette (Eat A Book Records)

It takes soul to play punk rock properly - you can't hear it, but you know it's there and in the case of Jerkstore's Language Barrier you can feel it burning through each note like a shot of paint-stripper through the lining of your stomach and throat (in a good way, obviously).

The Canberra, Austraila band utilise an 80s hardcore aesthetic with contemporary intensity, their short and punchy songs lasting around one to two minutes each. The album runs from one to the next without any gaps in a relentless 15-minute fury workout - and there are few vocalists who sound as genuinely furious as frontwoman Naomi, whose rabid shouting electrifies the music with a palpable rage that goes far beyond just following genre convention. This aspect contributes much of what sets Jerkstore apart, but it's also the powerful yet jagged riffing that gives their sound a life of its own, each instrument's tone stripped down to raw basics for maximum impact.

The best thing about Language Barrier is that listening to it feels about as close to being at a live show as you're likely to get in recorded format. Even with headphones on it almost seems like the band are playing directly in front of you in some tiny, packed-out venue, and (in my opinion) the ability to capture this sensation on tape is one of the greatest things recorded music can achieve.

Language Barrier is available on cassette from Eat A Book records (http://eatabookrecords.blogspot.com/), and can also be downloaded here: http://eatabookrecords.bandcamp.com/album/language-barrier

Friday 2 December 2011

Fugazi Live series available TODAY!

As of today, the Fugazi Live archive is up and running. 

The seminal DC post-hardcore outfit recorded over 800 of the live shows they played from 1987 to 2003. After the task of sorting these shows into order by date, the band have made them available to download from Dischord records. In line with the band's policy of pricing all shows at $5, this is the suggested price for each download, although different price options can be selected by the buyer with a minimum charge of $1. 

So far, 130 of these 800-plus recorded shows are available, and the band will be releasing more each month.

To download and for more info, go to http://www.dischord.com/fugazi_live_series

Friday 18 November 2011

Stinky Wizzleteat To Guest In New Film

The Birmingham-based Stonercore duo make a guest appearance in the upcoming film Turbulence. 

Described on the film's website as a "musical romantic comedy", Turbulence follows a group of twenty-somethings in various levels of involvement with a failing music venue. As a last ditch attempt to save the venue from bankruptcy, a Battle of the Bands is staged, and Stinky Wizzleteat feature as one of the competing acts.

The DVD launch for Turbulence takes place Friday December 2nd at Vivid in Digbeth. Tickets can be purchased from the vivid website at  http://www.vivid.org.uk

For more info go to http://turbulencefilm.com/

Stinky Wizzleteat's album, Teat Law, is out now for download on Soundcloud: http://soundcloud.com/stinky-wizzleteat

Thursday 17 November 2011

Review: Papayer/Nai Harvest Split EP

These days it's debatable whether the term 'emo' is still valid as a musical descriptor, defined as it sadly is in popular culture by an array of cringeworthy corporate mutilations. However, a plethora of bands have cropped up recently that draw on the better aspects of the genre to make some genuinely imaginative, heartfelt music. 

Papayer and Nai Harvest provide evidence of this fact; while both share certain genre elements, neither fall into the trap of following too strictly the template of their influences, and this split EP exhibits two very distinctive acts. 

Papayer have a knack for utilising unpredictable structures and abrupt changes in their songs with impressive cohesion. The anthemic opening to Pierre pulls us in and along with the track's emotional twists and turns, as friendships and loves are lamented, before Brand Partnership initiates another winding journey, switching gears between melodic fury and hushed introspection.

Nai Harvest also pack their tunes to the gills with melodic and rhythmic nuances, but in contrast to Papayer possess a more 'punk' feel to their sound, largely attributed to rough-throated vocals that at times resemble Tom Gabel. In Tim Helped Me Get Over It, a spoken-word intro gives way to a driving rhythm and thrashed out chords. Distance, etc. concludes the Nai Harvest side, melding shimmering, wistful melodies with a joyful kinetic energy.

In its four tracks, the Papayer/Nai Harvest split EP is a short, sweet reaffirmation of emo as a genre. Available from November 18, it can be heard at http://papayer.bandcamp.com and http://naiharvest.bandcamp.com

Friday 4 November 2011

Live Review: Carnage Club presents Boom! Headshot! 5

Temple of Boom Studio, Amblecote has held some of the area’s best events this year with the past four ‘Boom! Headshot!’ nights, drawing on the simple-but-magical combination of excellent underground bands/artists and intimate rehearsal room settings. So for this fifth instalment expectations and excitement are running high - and rightfully so considering the line-up in store…   
 Kicking off proceedings in supremely groove-laden fashion, Mothertrucker bring the party crashing in with a fine selection of instrumentals packed with mammoth riffs and dark atmospherics. Their music guides us through a series of subtle twists and turns, from the bowel-shaking heaviness of Duff McCagan’s Caggin Wagon to the agile interweaving lines of Vigo the Carpathian. Closing with the tense Kings of Kabaddi, the ‘Trucker leave the crowd thoroughly juiced up and ready for more.
 Next up is the explosive sludgecore onslaught of Crash Night. Their towering opener, Falling Star, provides a slower lead-in to the rest of the set, which for the most part comprises of short, fast blast assaults accompanied by rabid screaming. Each track seems to add to a building sense of malevolence within the room which peaks in the untitled closing piece, an exercise in nastiness that winds up becoming a ten minute noise jam to soundtrack the bodies now being flung from wall to wall.
 With the pit in full swing, the timing for Vicious Bastard to hit the floor couldn’t be better as their ultra-precise, technical grindcore kicks up an intense shit-storm. Among their brutal compositions an extremely sped-up cover of Holy Diver is thrown in to great effect, before the band leaves us with From the Smoke Came Locusts, a fine demonstration in the art of monolithic breakdowns.
 Our taste for metal satisfied, the night now takes an abrupt stylistic turn as Crushing Blows serve up a helping of punked-up psych-pop, diving straight into the sugar rush of recent single I Dream of Becoming a Girl. Live, the duo’s music comes across a lot more raw and aggressive than the studio recordings, guitarist Chris flailing and digging into each melodic hook, while Andrew expertly juggles drum and keyboard duties while still beating the hell out of both instruments.
 The time now somewhere around 1AM, a sufficiently hyped up (mainly drunk) audience are joyous recipients to the sound of Papayér’s emotionally supercharged, anthemic post-hardcore. Tunes like Dark Repellent and Duan De Waal make cathartic gang-chant sing-alongs, even for a crowd who have barely heard them. All three musicians tear their vocal chords to shreds with each lyric, while displaying a mastery of dynamic control that serves to pull the heartstrings along the highs and lows evoked within each structure.
 Tonight’s final performance comes from History Of The Hawk, who seem to have spent the meantime winding up like a spring. When they do finally charge into You, Me, Let’s Cybercide Baby the room explodes. Both band and audience become a whirlwind of gleeful chaos, frontman Nathan stumbling in the midst of it all like a mad drunk, screaming and grabbing at people. Guitars, microphone cables and items of clothing are displaced, while tumultuous versions of tracks like Freyer and Little Parisians burst through the wreckage. X is the New Y ensures that any remaining destructive tendencies are exorcized until the last remnants of musicality are lost under a pile of sweaty bodies.

And so ends another Boom! Headshot! - leaving us exhilarated, exhausted and a tad disturbed. Roll on the next one!

Wednesday 21 September 2011

Review: Stinky Wizzleteat - Teat Law

Birmingham's Stinky Wizzleteat create a brand of sludge and hardcore-flavoured heaviness which they have perfected in this debut full-length album, compiling a supreme selection of tracks brimming with fury and menace; an audio catharsis channeled through the power of killer riffs.

From the ferocious kick of opener 'Julia Louis Dreyfus' through to vitriolic closer 'We Are Kenyans, Not Phillistines', Teat Law is driven by heavy-as-hell grooves and embellished with angular rhythmic twists and lead lines, while vicious screams and growls punctuate the maelstrom. The prevailing feel of the album is a mixture of malevolence and desolation, each track awash with suffocatingly thick distortion while still maintaining a punk-like high energy level. This onslaught lets up slightly for the album's slow-burning centrepiece, 'Ironic Veneration of Tyrants', a punishing lesson in the invocation of despondency. Elsewhere, there's doom riffs and Melvins-esque chugging ('Robohymen and Persuadoboy'), T.V and film samples throughout that range from abstract to absurd (the brilliant lead-in to 'Wank Fantasy', for example) and positively monolithic breakdowns ('Stoner Moms'). 

Teat Law is a thoroughly recommended slab of musical steak, and is available to download from Soundcloud by visiting http://soundcloud.com/stinky-wizzleteat/sets/teat-law/. Tuck in…

For more info on Stinky Wizzleteat, visit http://www.facebook.com/stinkywizzleteat.


Tuesday 13 September 2011

Black Flag and Oxbow men form new band!!!

In what seems like a sort of punk-rock dream scenario, former Black Flag bass legend Chuck Dukowski has teamed up with Oxbow frontman Eugene Robinson to form a new band, Black Face. The band - completed by guitarist Milo Gonzalez (of Insects vs. Robots) and drummer Tom Dobrov (ex Oxbow) - have recorded four songs, which they will release on two separate 7" singles. 

These will only be available in vinyl form and definitely more than worth getting; not only will they feature such prestigious personnel, but in addition to this will consist of Dukowski-penned Black Flag songs that, until now, have never been recorded! Originally written around the band's My War era, shortly before Dukowski's departure, the titles are: 'Monster', 'I Want to Kill You', ''Where Will We Run' and 'Leave Me Out to Rot'.

If the thought of never-before-heard 'Flag songs with the insane vocals of Eugene Robinson doesn't excite you, then you really need help.

'I Want to Kill You' / 'Monster' 7" will be out soon on Hydra Head. Black Face will be playing live so here's hoping they grace our shores!

Monday 12 September 2011

Adam Beckley - Revere

This is the third release from Stourbridge experimental artist Adam Beckley, who uses samples and guitars to create enveloping freeform soundscapes. While his previous two EPs focused largely on walls of droning sound, the six tracks featured on Revere have eased up on this approach in favour of a more open, spacious style in which layers of harmonic and melodic phrases are gradually built up and intricately interwoven. The result is Beckley's most texturally rich and emotionally poignant recorded work to date.

'Unleashed, You Spoke' begins the album with a gentle shimmering sample which repeats hypnotically before opening up into dense, swirling melodies. This leads to the plaintive 'Freefall', whose sombre mood is carried into the slowly rising 'Bring Us Balance'. From here the listener is taken down into the depths of the stark, melancholic 'I Take the Form of Your Skeleton', and then lifted again by the delicate beauty of the title track. 'Take Me to the Secrets' brings the album to an understated conclusion, its haunting final note fading into muffled ambient noise and leaving the ears lingering. For fans of ambient, atmospheric music, Revere is essential listening.

Revere is out now via Carnage Club as a CD or can be downloaded from http://adambeckley.bandcamp.com. A cassette featuring artwork by Nathan Coyle is set for release soon. Adam Beckley is next playing at The Rose and Crown, Wordsley on Thursday 13 October so be there!

For more information go to:

Sunday 11 September 2011

Awesome Upcoming Things!!

Well now I've dropped myself in it. Having started this blog I realise I have a shitload of catching up to do in terms of keeping it up to date with some of the downright awesome events and releases coming up in the near future. So here's a comprehensive list of everything I can think of right now…

 FRIDAY 23 SEPTEMBER will see Stourbridge's finest disco-spazzcore troupe Diamonds head to Stoke on Trent to play The Rigger with Werewolves on Motorcycles and Space Witch. Anyone in this area should feel nothing less than a burning need to attend this gig; Diamonds' live shows are highly reputable for kicking up a storm of chaotic energy, spontaneous violence and underlying perversion. And what's more you get the dirty rock n' roll of Werewolves on Motorcycles, a barrel of heavy psych-doom grooves from Space Witch AND DJs. So get on it.
For more gig info visit http://www.facebook.com/TheDoomDoctor
Diamonds' full length album, Crystal Ravens, is out now on Allegiance Records and available in CD and digital download formats. Visit http://www.facebook.com/diamondstheband or http://www.allegiance-records.com/ !

On THURSDAY 13 OCTOBER, solo artist Adam Beckley will bring his ambient dreamscapes to the Rose and Crown in Wordsley. Equipped with only a sampler and a mixer (and occasionally guitar), Adam constructs and dismantles ethereal musical movements that gradually envelope the audience with their rich, flowing textures. A live performance not to be missed. 
Adam Beckley has released three solo recordings to date; two self-released EPs, Our Given Sleep and Western; and one release, Revere, via Carnage Club records. Visit http://adambeckley.bandcamp.com/ to download all of these. Revere is available in CD form too from Carnage Club, and will also soon be released as a limited edition cassette so be on the lookout!

This takes us to SATURDAY 15 OCTOBER and Carnage Club's 'Boom! Headshot! 5', the fifth instalment in what has been a series of consistently awesome events in which gig organisers Carnage Club bring a collection of amazing bands and artists to Temple of Boom Studios, Amblecote, and proceed to tear the place a new one. The atmosphere is like that of a really great party, with the added bonus of really REALLY great bands! Previous 'Boom! Headshot!' nights have featured the likes of The Ergon Carousel, Burnst, Eyeball Eyeball, Stinky Wizzleteat, Howard James Kenny, Diamonds, Ephemetry, The Shogun's Decapitator, Inertia Blooms, Drop The Ball, Timothy Parkes, Sperare, Human Hands, Dying Giant and many others whose performances in the hearts and minds of those who witnessed them fell nothing short of legendary. 
At the time of writing, two bands have been confirmed for 'Boom! Headshot! 5', with another five acts to be announced. Thus far, local experimental hardcore crew History of the Hawk and supertechnical mathcore shit-kickers Antares are billed, both of which are bound to blow brains. The fact that five more slices of supreme musical talent are to be added to this line up is actually more than the capacity of the human mind can accommodate for.
Follow this link for more info and to join the party!  http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=205896986140825

Then, before you even get chance to get over your killer hangover, SUNDAY 16 OCTOBER sees the Flapper, Birmingham host an evening of experimental/progressive/post-rock styles. These come courtesy of fantastic mind-bending headliners Lite, Leicester-based instrumentalists Maybeshewill, local post-metal math-rockers Io and  S'bridge/Halesowen-based progressive-post-metallers Dying Giant. I've been fortunate to have seen the latter of these play a few gigs and each time I've been blown away; DG possess a masterful balance of crushing heaviness and heart rending emotional resonance in their work. Add this to the rest of the line up and we're in for a real treat. For further info see: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=165200710212183

Finally, Birmingham riff monsters Stinky Wizzleteat and History of the Hawk will join forces for a show at the Fat Cat Cafe bar in Stoke on Trent on FRIDAY 28 OCTOBER. Further details of following shows in Manchester and Worcester  coming soon. Having seen these two bands share a stage earlier this summer it's safe to say they are truly a match made in Heaven. In other cool news these two bands will be releasing a split cassette in the near future! 
Stinky Wizzleteat's album, Teat Law, can be listened to now on Soundcloud: http://soundcloud.com/stinky-wizzleteat/sets/teat-law

Okay well that's about it for now, follow the links, go to the shows, enjoy the music!

-Luke Fewtrell-Bowers

Saturday 10 September 2011

History Of The Hawk - Ocean EP

This Stourbridge band have only been together a short time and already they're beginning to cause a stir on the underground scene. This can be largely owed to the tunes that have been showcased from this impressive debut, displaying a brand of frenetic hardcore that draws on a broad musical heritage to create a sound with a characteristic all of its own.

From the driving rhythms and blood-boiling riffage of 'X is the new Y' and 'Freyer' the EP takes the listener through a series of twists and turns; into Fugazi-esque stop-starting and catchy dual shouts ('You, Me, Let's Cybercide Baby'); slow doomy riffs that abruptly give way to an angular aural assault (the apocalyptic 'Little Parisians'); old-school hardcore stylings ('Social Heat'); before concluding with 'The Map is not the Territory', a slab of majestic bleakness coupled with a churning rhythm that fans of Drive Like Jehu would love.

With Ocean, HOTH have crafted a sonic rollercoaster which will leave you thrilled, dizzy and slightly nauseous. Need proof? Stream the whole EP from http://historyofthehawk.bandcamp.com

Ocean EP is set for release via digital download on 17 October by In at the Deep End Records and will be available from iTunes and other popular downloading sites. The EP will also be available in vinyl form, courtesy of Speedowax. 

For more details see:
www.facebook.com/historyofthehawk
www.iatde.com

Hello!! - An Introduction to RTL

So I thought a good place to start would be to introduce myself and explain the point of this whole thing. My name's Luke, I live in the town of Stourbridge, in the West Midlands, UK, planet Earth. I decided to start this blog because in this area and those nearby there's a hell of a lot of interesting stuff happening musically, stuff that generally won't get a lot of media coverage. So, while I know that one person's little blogspot site isn't going to make the world of difference to this fact, at least I can "do my bit" to help promote some of the great bands and artists that I see and hear who are either from the area or come through on the gig circuit. That said this thing isn't area-specific and if I hear something amazing from elsewhere (as one can easily thru the wonders of the internet) then that's gonna get covered too. 

Basically to sum it up, I'm writing about music (and music-related subjects) that I like and that I feel doesn't get enough written about it. Hopefully this will point a few people in the direction of some music that will enrich and enhance their lives. But who knows, we'll see.