Protomartyr — The Agent Intellect (Hardly Art)

dustedmagazine:

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Let’s face it: the industry expectation is that rock music is for, by, and about young’uns. Protomartyr bucks these expectations. Singer Joe Casey is dealing with the unsexy reality of losing parents, the long look down the decline slope of what comes after age 40. Sonic precedents abound: it’s easy to hear traces of the Fall, Joy Division, Girls Against Boys, but The Agent Intellect is not retro. Rather, the record exists in and ruminates on the now, be it under the well-heeled dystopian umbrella of technology, or, alternately, the crushing mundanity of loss. The weight of this jumbled present is overwhelming, occasionally contradictory and senseless.  Rather than back down from the precipice of decline and confusion, Protomartyr has reported the situation as they see it in The Agent Intellect, an uncomfortable, honest and ultimately excellent record. 

Keep reading

On the new Protomartyr record.

Tales From the Metalnomicon: Michael T. Fournier & Dead Trend

Screaming Females — Rose Mountain (Don Giovanni)

dustedmagazine:

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For ten years, Screaming Females have been bringing their specific brand of three-piece punk shred to basements all over the world. It’s jarring, then, that on their new long player Rose Mountain, the veneer of scuzz that coated their past recordings has been stripped clean in favor of a more produced, metal-sounding attack. Punk purists may remember the final Jawbreaker album, which was loudly and widely decried as a sellout (until revisionist history changed its mind years later).  Worry not, for this is not your father’s devisive Dear You.

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Pile—You’re Better Than This (Exploding in Sound)

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On You’re Better Than This, Boston’s Pile builds on the heavy, thorny foundation laid down after extensive touring and the 2012 long-player Dripping. But unlike some of their heavy contemporaries, the band’s song structures rely on their own internal logic, often eschewing easy structures and easy answers as each new part builds on the last rather than relying on simple verses and choruses.

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Yep.

Torche – Restarter (Relapse)

dustedmagazine:

Torche is all about juxtaposition: their particular brand of metal depends on the tension created by the heavy trudge of dropped tuning and pile-driver rhythm grinding tectonically against melodic vocal harmonies bearing the weight of pop hooks. The intersections of these two seemingly disparate elements, the heavy and the poppy, are in fine form on Restarter and should appeal to fans of both heft and sweetness.

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Yeah I did.

Cabildo Quarterly #7 out now!

cabildoquarterly:

Cabildo Quarterly #7, dead of winter 2015. Featuring work by Hedy Habra, Joe Mayers, Sara Emily Kuntz, Constance Renfrow, Angele Ellis and Anne Witty.

Print copies available free in/around greater Belchertown MA/Pittsburgh PA and at readings. Additional copies are available for a buck per or five bux for a stack— hit me at cabildoquarterly at the gmail for the address — or digitally on .pdfcast and/or issuu.

Number eight out in May.

The Other Night at Quinn’s: It’s Not About Time – The Spanish Donkey by Mike Faloon

cabildoquarterly:

It’s chilly tonight, cold in ways our backyard thermometer can’t measure, cold in ways that slows down everything and induces a huddle-round-a-fire feeling, triggers the need to pull in closer.

The Spanish Donkey are having a similar effect. They push forth enormous arrays of sound—guitar and…

cabildoquarterly:

Trophy Wife: All The Sides

We’re told, or led to believe, that in the end, it’s all just a huge pile of content, sitting there, waiting. The playing field has been leveled;  the opportunities are endless. The landfills, however, are not. They beckon and plead: fill me.

                The result – the symptom – is frontloading, getting the hook up front to grab attention. Because no one has an attention span any more, we’re told. Because everything is available to everyone at all times, no one gives a shit about anything, and we’re becoming zombies, sleepwalking through our day trying to kill content. Annihiliate this stream, this viral video, all week long.

                But it’s bullshit is the thing.  There’s evidence everywhere: unlikely comebacks, TV series sprawling out over six, seven seasons, killing cliché as they develop characters to be considered outside (and far away) from a 22-minute frame, serial podcasts, you name it. The diagnosis that we’re dulled by and slave to the stream of content perpetuates itself when we buy in – but the increasing realization that the quick-hit simulacra is bogus is just over the horizon and easily visible with a few steps closer. Artists who eschew the quick fix in favor of nuance and authenticity and the long haul are those few steps.

                And just over that horizon is Trophy Wife, with All the Sides, their third long-player. This Philly two-piece painstakingly crafts their mini-epics of bombast and nuance, and they do it by (get this) listening to each other. By spending time in the practice space focusing on how many times, how loud, how this part drops out so this other part can kick in. It sounds simple because it is, but it can’t always be:  guitarist Diane Foglizzo and drummer Katy Otto are both sick players, able to stop on so many dimes, drop oddly timed phrases in and out with nary a seam, and twist distortion into contemplation (and vice versa). I can imagine how easy it might be to just go off and let the sparse arrangement pick up the metaphorical slack. But nope. Both members realize throughout that they’re halves of a greater whole, and through this understanding – through servicing the songs they write, at the expense of going off or over – they show listeners that patience is rewarded, that things come together over time, and that music, despite the new economy or whatever, does not have to be disposable to be noticed. It can be heartfelt and passionate and difficult and no less rewarding.

                Audrey’s Song is a perfect embodiment of everything Trophy Wife does well: picked single notes yield to sheets of distortion, as Foglizzo and Otto’s vocals buzz, conjoin, and fly away; toms roll, measures drop and reappear seemingly on their own accord. It’s affecting stuff which rewards repeated listens, which is what the band wants, more than a quick hit. This is long haul stuff, the fragility and empowerment of sustenance.

Michael T. Fournier

Cabildoquarterly.tumblr.com

Review of Swing State

thanks to Foreward Reviews for this great ‘Swing State’ review.

Review-- Gnards: "Deep"; Karen Lillis: "The Paul Simon Project"

cabildoquarterly:

Gnards: “Deep” (https://gnards.bandcamp.com/)

Because I know these dudes – and know their pedigree – it’s easy for me to talk about where they’re coming from. I mean, if you know Pete Camerato, chances are good that you’ve seen the guy perform dressed as D. Boon in his long-running band…