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The thing with the Dirty Nil is they almost always fall in to the same trap that the Darkness occasionally falls into in that instead of writing rock songs that might be funny they try to write funny songs that might rock and it comes off forced. Lyrically the new album follows in the tradition of the other albums where you kinda have to ignore the words or you wanna die. That said Ride or Die rocks. There are always a few songs each album that makes me keep coming back even if my brain says this is dumb.
Jesus Christ Last Words off the new Steve Earle album fucking killed me. Thanks a lot for recommending that one guys fuck I'm gonna go jump off the roof now.
Joined: Wed January 02, 2013 2:23 am Posts: 3645 Location: The In Between
bada wrote:
The thing with the Dirty Nil is they almost always fall in to the same trap that the Darkness occasionally falls into in that instead of writing rock songs that might be funny they try to write funny songs that might rock and it comes off forced. Lyrically the new album follows in the tradition of the other albums where you kinda have to ignore the words or you wanna die. That said Ride or Die rocks. There are always a few songs each album that makes me keep coming back even if my brain says this is dumb.
This is dead on balls accurate. I only “discovered” them when they opened for White Reaper. They’re very fun live. The kid can play guitar effortlessly and scream forever, but his lyrics are frequently embarrassing.
The thing with the Dirty Nil is they almost always fall in to the same trap that the Darkness occasionally falls into in that instead of writing rock songs that might be funny they try to write funny songs that might rock and it comes off forced. Lyrically the new album follows in the tradition of the other albums where you kinda have to ignore the words or you wanna die. That said Ride or Die rocks. There are always a few songs each album that makes me keep coming back even if my brain says this is dumb.
This is dead on balls accurate. I only “discovered” them when they opened for White Reaper. They’re very fun live. The kid can play guitar effortlessly and scream forever, but his lyrics are frequently embarrassing.
That's funny I "discovered" them by googling 'bands like White Reaper'.
Joined: Wed January 02, 2013 2:23 am Posts: 3645 Location: The In Between
Chevelle released a new single ahead of a March album. I can’t imagine them being anyone’s favorite band, but they are so reliable at making songs that are perfect for lifting weights.
Today kicks off the second half of Constellation Records' Corona Borealis series with "The Smell of Wet Clay" by Brooklyn-based film composer T. Griffin. Additionally, Constellation has announced that they are also releasing an album of Griffin's soundtrack to the 2018 film The Proposal, which will share the same title as the film and is inextricably linked to Griffin's Corona Borealis series piece. The album will be released digitally on April 12, with physical formats to follow on June 11.
The film is a docu-drama by artist Jill Magid that examines the legacy of Luis Barragán, a Mexican architect, and T. Griffin's score features his own contributions on banjo, guitar, percussion, keyboards, field recordings, and voice with additional instrumentation from a host of friends including Sophie Trudeau, Matana Roberts, Tim Herzog, Jim White, and Jason Ajemian among others. "The Smell of Wet Clay" emerged from some leftover material from the recording sessions for The Proposal that Griffin reshaped and added to while in isolation from Covid last spring.
Both the new piece and the album can be found at the same link on Bandcamp where the former can be obtained at Name Your Price for now, and the latter can be preordered: https://tgriffin.bandcamp.com/album/the-proposal
Here's "The Smell of Wet Clay" along with video directed by Jill Magid, edited by Hannah Buck, and filmed Jarred Alterman:
Last edited by Brett on Fri January 15, 2021 1:43 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Striking while the iron is hot, Pete Johnston is following up last year's two See Through 4 albums with a new third release under that band name, Permanent Moving Parts, out March 26 on All-Set! Editions. The See Through 4 band is a mutable project with Johnston selecting band members for whatever role he needs, so on this release the quartet consists of Johnston in the ever present role of bassist/composer, Lina Allemano on trumpet, Michael Davidson providing vibraphone, and Jake Oelrichs in the drummer's seat. This album is apparently the third in a "jazz trilogy," so who knows what the next See Through project might be, but with the press release alluding to threads of '80s era Rush appearing on this record, I wouldn't be surprised to see Johnston return to his more rock-oriented See Through 5.
Here's the Bandcamp link where opening track "Underground Over Night" can currently be streamed:
Here we are, back again, this time with the 10th release of Constellation's Corona Borealis series (the second one of this year), "3 Stars on Mountain of Doom" by Eric Chenaux. The track is a mutli-segmented piece that is inspired by the work of experimental folk musician Richard Youngs and the final segment is an instrumental version of Youngs' song "Mountain of Doom." The entire work is instrumental with Chenaux layering electric guitar, nylon-string guitar, bowed guitar, electronics, and field recordings in his usual dreamlike soundscape fashion.
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