NEWS — POST-TRASH Post-Trash Facebook Post-Trash Twitter

Squid - "Cowards" | Album Review

Squid - "Cowards" | Album Review

While Cowards is inspired by the grotesque literature of Haruki Murakami and Ottessa Moshfegh, it's also a clear response to a world in flames. With its charging rhythms and gorgeous melodies, it appears as the band's most impassioned work yet. A demand rather than a cry for its listeners to attempt to defeat their cowardice, and to not ignore the evil in their own lives lest they become it.

Television Personalities - "Tune In, Turn On, Drop Out: The Radio Sessions 1980-1993" | Album Review

Television Personalities - "Tune In, Turn On, Drop Out: The Radio Sessions 1980-1993" | Album Review

This Television Personalities collection of radio performances has a handful of wonderful and deranged nuggets that show the gifts Treacy and the band possessed even through their roughest personal and professional moments. Television Personalities were a band that should have been more recognized for their impact as their colorful songs laid the foundations for many more recognizable successors.

Kenny Segal & K-the-I??? "Genuine Dexterity" | Album Review

Kenny Segal & K-the-I??? "Genuine Dexterity" | Album Review

Genuine Dexterity is a release that might have lit the scene on fire and cemented itself as a collaboration arguably more important and revelatory than the others which raised Segal’s profile in years prior. Every song has an earnestly elliptical understanding of hip hop as a sonic and social force in a way few artists in the genre do today.

Bill Callahan - "The Holy Grail: Bill Callahan's "Smog" Dec. 10, 2001 Peel Session" | Album Review

Bill Callahan - "The Holy Grail: Bill Callahan's "Smog" Dec. 10, 2001 Peel Session" | Album Review

The Holy Grail: Bill Callahan’s “Smog” Dec. 10, 2001 Peel Session is a modest effort that nonetheless has much to say about both Callahan’s evolution and his consistency. This EP doesn’t rewrite history exactly, but it is revelatory about the contingent steps taken by him as an artist, more apparent in retrospect, thus amounting to a kind of rosebud explaining the move from one chapter to the next.

Greg Freeman - "I Looked Out" (Reissue) | Album Review

Greg Freeman - "I Looked Out" (Reissue) | Album Review

When Burlington singer-songwriter Greg Freeman quietly dropped I Looked Out, his first record released under his own name, there was little fanfare. Looking back at it two years later, with this new vinyl reissue and a follow-up record seemingly imminent, it stands as a showcase of an exciting songwriter who came out of the gate with a fully realized musical vision and unique lyrical style, and nowhere to go but up.

ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Black Curse - "Burning in Celestial Poison"

ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Black Curse - "Burning in Celestial Poison"

Black Curse’s second album, Burning in Celestial Poison, is 45 minutes of excruciating malevolence. Four years after their debut, the band returns with four curses, recited with impenetrable shrieking and swirling guitars hollering from the depths of Hell.

Various Artists - "Cosmic Waves Volume 1" | Album Review

Various Artists - "Cosmic Waves Volume 1" | Album Review

Cosmic Waves Volume 1 is sort of a compilation. That “sort of” categorization is due to a rarely applied (if done before) concept - a musical dialogue between Angel Olsen and five other artists/bands chosen by her. Side A features the label’s artists while Side B finds Olsen covering songs from their respective catalogs.

ALBUM OF THE WEEK: The Submissives - "Live At Value Sound Studios"

ALBUM OF THE WEEK: The Submissives - "Live At Value Sound Studios"

The Live at Value Sound Studios album by The Submissives is an honest, versatile, chamber of preternatural affairs. Full of satirical, distorted sounds, the band are reminiscent of 60s kink-style, psychedelic-fueled rock and riot-y Mommy Long Legs qualities.

ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Kim Deal - "Nobody Loves You More"

ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Kim Deal - "Nobody Loves You More"

Nobody Loves You More is undoubtedly Kim Deal’s most sincere album. Its warm and sunny tone has been widely noted – there is a pink flamingo on the LP’s sleeve like it’s a Christopher Cross album – and explained as a reflection of her unanticipated time in Florida.

Black Ends - "Psychotic Spew" | Album Review

Black Ends - "Psychotic Spew" | Album Review

It takes a lot of chutzpah for a band to dub themselves the progenitors of a new genre, but Seattle’s Black Ends are up to the task, trading in what they call “gunk pop.” A sideways inversion of pop-punk, deep from the Pacific Northwest ethos of bluesy, heavy grunge and raucous, righteous Riot Girl.