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ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Astrel K - "The Foreign Department"

ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Astrel K - "The Foreign Department"

The Foreign Department is Rhys Edwards’ (of Ulrika Spacek) follow up to 2022’s impressive Flickering I, released under the name Astrel K. Under this moniker, Edwards’ pop sensibility is more transparently laid bare. There’s equal parts hooks, sweet melancholy, and beautiful song arrangements throughout the album.

Bloody Head - "Perpetual Eden" | Album Review

Bloody Head - "Perpetual Eden" | Album Review

Nottingham’s whistling whirlwind of chaos, Bloody Head, make themselves heard loud and (mostly) clear with their seventh release, Perpetual Eden. The album extends to the listener a deep dive into the contemporary human condition in a way unique to the band – through cleansing noise, harsh epiphanies, and beautifully messy lyricism.

Frances Chang - "Psychedelic Anxiety" | Album Review

Frances Chang - "Psychedelic Anxiety" | Album Review

The sophomore album of this New York art punk is a sensory amalgamation of haunting memories and chromatic films, gift wrapped in angelic gauze. With allusions to Deerhoof’s eclectic instrumentation, the groove is grafted onto Jeff Buckley’s sweeping romanticism, then filtered through ambient progressive rock. 

Verity Den - "Verity Den" | Album Review

Verity Den - "Verity Den" | Album Review

Verity Den, like most of the current artists working in the indie rock mode have their inspirations that range from the best of shoegaze and dream-pop, spiced with a good dose of Yo La Tengo. Yet, what is not so often the case, the trio have re-modeled and re-shaped their inspirations into a defined, individual sound.

Betcover!! - "馬 (Uma)" | Album Review

Betcover!! - "馬 (Uma)" | Album Review

Last year's 馬 (Uma) may seem smaller-scale with its runtime just under half an hour compared to its predecessor's near-hour, but it's in this smaller scale that Betcover!! has managed to build its tightest work yet. They’re a band that feels slightly out of time, the mix of modern techniques with old school blues at once new yet classic.

Split System - "Vol. 2" | Album Review

Split System - "Vol. 2" | Album Review

Australia's own Split System have presented their latest album, Vol. 2, as a kind of musical counteragent. By first questioning if our "demands of punk are a little too high... [or] a little too exacting," not to mention talk of primal itches that need scratching, they’ve positioned themselves as a hard-hitting salve for needless wanderlust.

ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Uranium Club - "Infants Under The Bulb"

ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Uranium Club - "Infants Under The Bulb"

At long last, the Club has released new music, Infants Under the Bulb, a record that does what all great records by great bands do: overdelivers on some expectations and completely thwarts others. Make no mistake: the Uranium Club is back, and they’ve outdone themselves.

Mannequin Pussy - "I Got Heaven" | Album Review

Mannequin Pussy - "I Got Heaven" | Album Review

Marisa Dabice said I Got Heaven is about unleashing the animal inside of her, about a kind of freedom we aren't allowed. It is that feral eeriness that defines this album and what gives it a distinct sound from previous Mannequin Pussy records. The ten songs feel like crawling through mud, sprinting through tall grass, seeing your hot breath.

Fantastic Purple Spots - "Vibrations Now" | Album Review

Fantastic Purple Spots - "Vibrations Now" | Album Review

Vibrations Now is the new EP from Fantastic Purple Spots, the duo of Barrett Jones and Dave Junker out of Austin, Texas, four songs full of folk-ish dreamy psychedelia that lingers in the eardrums well after its done. They lean into the spacier aspects of their influences and recall the fuzzier elements of a band like Brian Jonestown Massacre.

Fugitive Bubble - "Delusion" | Album Review

Fugitive Bubble - "Delusion" | Album Review

The elusive Fugitive Bubble bursts through the Olympia, WA music scene to wreak havoc on conscientious, hard-core thrill seekers with their glorious re-issue of Delusion through Sorry State Records. Blazing through ten tracks in less than twenty minutes, Delusion flashes teeth to freedom, and casts off the cuffs of bondage.

ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Mary Timony - "Untame The Tiger"

ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Mary Timony - "Untame The Tiger"

Timony epitomizes the rock-and-roll lifer, a journey-person musician who has integrated different genres through a steady output. This new solo album feels different, however. Though she has never been absent, Untame the Tiger sounds like both a culmination of these prolific decades and a re-introduction.

Friko - "Where We've Been, Where We Go From Here" | Album Review

Friko - "Where We've Been, Where We Go From Here" | Album Review

Friko is the latest band from Chicago’s expansive indie scene to turn heads with the release of their debut full length. In an impressive and complex blossom of chamber-pop, post-punk, and poetic spite, the duo have loomed together a blistering quilt of melodies, moving compositions, and notable spine-shivering anthems.

Ty Segall - "Three Bells" | Album Review

Ty Segall - "Three Bells" | Album Review

The passing of the lyric writing and, often, vocal duties, to his partner Denée Segall and collaborator, emphasizes the general musical direction Ty Segall seems to be taking his project. Both this record and his prior album, “Hi, Hello,” share what feels like less of an urgency to arrive at a specific destination.

ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Rome Streetz - "Noise Kandy 5"

ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Rome Streetz - "Noise Kandy 5"

Rome Streetz is not resting on his laurels but instead putting the rap game in a stranglehold. He’s out here waiting for his prize fight, and he sounds as hungry as he ever did. The MC has given us a lot to digest on one of last year’s definitive hip-hop albums, a record meant to unpack in time.

Spiritualized - "Amazing Grace" (Reissue) | Album Review

Spiritualized - "Amazing Grace" (Reissue) | Album Review

Throughout their career, Spiritualized has transformed psychedelic rock. They’ve taken seemingly small steps in re-shaping the standard formulas and they’ve taken big leaps into the unknown. At that, their best albums usually include both. That’s exactly what was happening on their fifth album Amazing Grace, newly reissues last month.