Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Fear Before The March Of Flames - Art Damage


Art Damage is the second release from the influential hardcore band Fear Before The March Of Flames.The album was released in 2004 and marks their first release on Equal Vision records. The copy that I have was released by Suburban Home Records as a limited run picture disc. Suburban Home records finds albums that do not have a vinyl format and if they deem them worthy they release it. They released 200 online and the first 100 were signed by the band (mine included). Each vinyl is hand numbered as well. I saw FBTMOF back in 2009 and it was a phenomenal show. The band had great energy and presence and they played several songs from this album. Unfortunately, it's now impossible to see them as they have split. If you haven't heard this album you should definitely check it out on vinyl!

Buy Art Damage:

 http://www.suburbanhomerecords.com/releases/fear-before-the-march-of-flames-art-damage/

Fear Before The March Of Flames:

http://www.fearbefore.net/

Art Damage:
http://www.filefactory.com/file/b47d19e/n/Fear_Before_The_March_Of_Flames_-_Art_Damage.rar
(password - thesirenssound.com)

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

The Locust - Flight Of The Wounded Locust (4X7")

This band needs no introduction and chances are you either love them or hate them. The Locust's fifth  album Flight Of The Wounded Locust was released back in 2001 on the now defunct label Gold Standard Laboratories. This release marks the bands last release as a 5 piece. Originally, the E.P. was released as a 6 song 7" but a limited run of 3000 copies were made into this package of 4 7"s and released including the tracks off their split with Arab On Radar. Each package has four different colored vinyls that all fit together like a puzzle. Highlight on this album is the title track "Flight Of The Wounded Locust". It is an all electronic instrumental track that clocks in around 3 minutes long, which was probably their longest song released until 2007 when they came out with New Erections. Savor this oldie and the others like it because I'm sure the sun has set on this band.


Buy Flight Of The Wounded Locust:

http://collectorsfrenzy.com/details/180937897969/The_Locust_Flight_Of_The_Wounded_Locust_4X7_Vinyl_Puzzle_shaped_Colored_New

The Locust website:

http://www.thelocust.com

Flight Of The Wounded Locust:

http://www.4shared.com/file/61939186/c3da1de/The_Locust_-_Flight_of_the_Wounded_Locust_EP__2001.html

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Tera Melos - Drugs To The Dear Youth

Tera Melos is a "math rock" band from Sacramento, California. I write "math rock" because that very narrowly describes the sound they create. If one to were to ask the band they would say they play "punk rock", but their music is a genre-bending fusion of jazz influenced post-hardcore with odd time signatures. They also make use of live electronics to add an extra layer to the sound. This record has had two pressings, the first of which was released back in 2007. This first pressing was  limited to only 500 copies on colored 12" records. The second pressing (which is the pressing mine comes from) was remixed/remastered and re-released in 2009  as a 10"with the help of the underground record label Sargent House. This album is the first one the band records as a three piece instead of four which in no way hinders their uniquely rich sound. Due to the fact that this is only their second ep it's amazing how much the band matured. On their previous album some of the songs meandered aimlessly, but on this release there is a much more clean, focused, well knit approach to their sound. One highlight on the record is the eight minute long "40 Rods To The Hog's Head." This song is by far the longest on the record and the band makes good use of the time. Although on might expect it, because of the length, they never bore the listener with mundane post-rock passages. It starts with beautiful progressive parts and the interplay between the drums and guitar is nonsensical but beautiful.  This track also shows the most use of the live electronics. The packaging for the vinyl has really cool art on it. The image is what I would expect if Dali re-imagined a Picasso. Also, the vinyl is a sweet clear/blue/green/purple splatter color. Overall the vinyl is a wonderful misadventure into the far reaches of the math rock genre and is highly recommended over their most recent release "Patagonian Rats."

Drugs To The Dear Youth:

http://www.mediafire.com/?ylmzzlz1jzm

Tera Melos Website:

http://teramelosmusic.com/

Buy Drugs To The Dear Youth:

http://teramelos1.tumblr.com/dttdy

-Jas

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Arab On Radar - Soak The Saddle

Soak The Saddle was Arab On Radar's first release on Skin Graft Records. The album was recorded between February 21-26 of 1999 and was recorded by the infamous Weasel Walter. One might ask oneself "Why is this young man reviewing an album that is over ten years old?" And that's a valid question, but I believe that Arab On Radar's music is more relevant today than ever. The music scene is flooded with carbon copy cut out bands and AOR bring something fresh, albeit weird, to the table. This album has had two pressings on vinyl, (mine being one of the second pressings) the first pressing was back in 2000 and then the second, entitled the "Back In The Saddle Edition", was released in 2010.The second pressing came colored (green and black splatter) with hand silk screened covers making the entire vinyl package a cool keepsake piece of art. The album is confusing, not in a sense of chaos necessarily, although there is plenty of that, it's more about how the band can take take all your dreams, hopes, fears and frustrations and make you feel them simultaneously. To add insult to injury the tracks are titled #1, #2,#3 etc. but they aren't in numerical order. This only adds to the derangement of your mind. The record has a unique charm in that it is totally inaccessible which gives it a raw "standing naked under a magnifying glass" feel. A couple highlights on the record are #1 and #3. #1 employs a cool stop start technique along side the singers disorderly squeals and yaks. #3 is the standout track, though. It sounds like what I would feel if a plane was going down while I was in it. The drums are almost dance influenced in this song and the guitar has this hypnotic repetition that entrances you and almost comforts you as you get lobotomized by the singers ferocious chatter. One downside to the album is that on several of the songs the vocals are not that easy to hear. Although, that is pretty typical among bands of this genre it is a bit irritating at times because the vocals really make AOR standout from other noise bands. Although this album is often hidden in shadow of their masterpiece, "Yahweh Or The Highway", it is definitely worth a listen. 

Soak The Saddle:
http://www.mediafire.com/?7mjjafw2im2

Arab On Radar Website:
http://arabonradar.info/

 Buy the vinyl at Insound!:
http://www.insound.com/Soak-the-Saddle-Reissue-Vinyl-LP-Arab-on-Radar/P/INS80398/

Monday, November 7, 2011

Snowing - I Could Do Whatever I Wanted If I Wanted

Okay, so I found out about this band when one of my favorite Portland acts, Girlfriends, was touring through the area. Snowing was on the bill as well as Algernon Cadwallader and 1994! I had never heard Snowing before but I had heard a lot about them and I was excited to see them. Their set was spastic and brief with poor sound (we couldn’t hear the vocals at all), however, it was fun. They were very engaging with the crowd almost in a loving way. I decided to pick up one of their 12” vinyls, entitled I Could Do Whatever I Want If I Wanted, just to see what they would sound like on some recordings.  This was little to no help. It just sounded like a botched recording session. Vocals were a little more conceivable than the live show but still hard to discern and the guitars/drums sounded distant.  I mean don’t get me wrong, I do love bands that have the “rough sound” but it just doesn’t work with Snowing’s poppy indie-emo math rock sound. All that aside, the album is just below mediocre. The opener “I think were in Minsk” is a boring early 90’s emo rip off track and truth be told it holds the mold for the rest of the songs on the record.  The whole thing sounds like a bad cut and paste job. Lyrically the album doesn’t do much for me either. It’s almost as if the singer is reading to us out of his 3rd grade journal. The lyrics do the emo genre justice however with typical themes about wanting an ex back and being alone. There really were no highlights on this album for me. If pressed, I would say the best track is “Why Am I Not Going Underwater?” and that is only because my record player malfunctioned towards the end of it and started making this droning looping sound. Nevertheless, these emo revivalist bands have become very popular so I will post a link to the music. The vinyl is in standard packaging with a full page lyric insert. Best thing overall about the record is the cover art. It looks like my cat.

Side note: After the show while talking to the band I asked them where I could find a digital format of the album. They said: “Mediafire.” Lol.

I Could Do Whatever I Wanted If I Wanted:

http://www.mediafire.com/?rvlo2c4qo9i7tlm

Snowing's Myspace:

http://www.myspace.com/snowingtheband

Snowing's Website:

http://www.snowingtheband.com

-Jas

Ad Astra Per Aspera - Catapult Calypso


Ad Astra Per Aspera was an obscure amalgamation of all musical avenues from Lawrence, Kansas. From noise rock to tropical to avant-garde to punk this band has it all. The project consists of Mike Tuley on guitar/vocals, Kurt Lane on drums, Brooke Hunt on guitar, Julie Lane on keyboards and Scott Edwards on bass. For me the main focus of the band is Tuley's idiomatic approach to singing. Whether it be with a barbaric yelp, a scream, or a slow sauntering whisper in your ear; he always has a peculiar way of keeping your attention. The bands premiere full length on Sonic Unyon Records, Catapult Calypso, garnered much acclaim in the underground music scene. This is the bands most mature and eclectic material to have been released. From the album opener "Voodoo Economics" we see that they have no problem switching genres within the same song several times. While this band does pull from the likes of Fugazi and Brainiac it's only in the way they approach their music, leaving plenty of room for originality.  Highlights on the album are "Scatter Baby Spiders", "Globos Illuminados", and "Flannery's Home Coming." The vinyl edition of the album comes with different album art than the CD version and it comes with a full page lyric insert. The vinyl itself is colored with black, white, and yellow splatters!

Catapult Calypso:

http://www.mediafire.com/?fhylnlmmn0w

Ad Astra Per Aspera Myspace:

http://www.myspace.com/adastraperaspera

Blue Collar Distro (you can buy the vinyl here):

http://www.bluecollardistro.com/adastraperaspera/product_info.php?products_id=2853&cPath=12_264&store=#.TrhEHLKDmSo

-Jas

Thursday, July 14, 2011

The Locust - The Peel Sessions

Today I have a special treat for you, The Locust’s latest release The Peel Sessions!  Recorded back on August 19th 2001, this album was long overdue. It’s comprised mostly of tracks from their pre-2004 discography all of which have been re-imagined and recorded live. The album was released May 18th, 2010 and features, for the first time, Gabe Serbian on drums. The locust play a fast paced, short length, synth entrenched version of powerviolence with a grindcore edge (and yes I am aware of the ongoing war over whether they are grind or not and frankly I don’t care, they’re great). Although I am a huge fan of this band I never got to see them live and The Peel Sessions gives you a taste of that. In the tradition of The Locust, the album is 16 tracks long and still totals a mere twelve and a half minutes. The LP has a more raw edge to it than the studio recordings and the band has incorporated more/different synth passages into the songs.  The album art is pretty cool too, the front has a huge list of all the bands that they are influenced by which range from Cat Stevens to Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds. The front also has a silkscreened locust emblem. The back side of the album has a photo of them playing in their traditional garb, goggles and facemasks. The record was the third release from the bands own Radio Surgery record label and it comes with a digital download card! If you haven’t gotten ahold of this on vinyl, DO SO! They’re being sold on the bands website and now come in a cool clear and yellow splatter colored vinyl.
The Peel Sessions:
The Locust's Myspace:
The Locust's website: