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Review: The Crystal Method – Self-Titled

Review: The Crystal Method – Self-Titled
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For their fifth studio album, The Crystal Method created a refreshing twist on what most electronic artists are currently producing, using heavy synth and rock elements to blow the minds and speakers of its listeners. … read more

Review: The Devil Makes Three – I’m a Stranger Here

Review: The Devil Makes Three – I’m a Stranger Here
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Few bands can capture the imagination like Devil Makes Three. They invoke deep-woods medicine shows, jumping blues juke joints and midnight hootenannies by moonlight. … read more

Review: Succubus – Descend Unto Gehenna

Review: Succubus – Descend Unto Gehenna
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Succubus take the chaotic approach of their slashing over grooves fixing on great—for a lack of a better term—“old school” qualities of the death metal and thrash genres, but do it without sounding like a hack or re-hash artists.  … read more

Review: Sumie – Self-Titled

Review: Sumie – Self-Titled
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Blending European and Japanese imagery, Sumie invokes complex lyrical ideas, creating an interesting juxtaposition between the simple and the intricate, which ends up working beautifully. Instrumentally, at its most complicated, it uses only background vocals and a piano while Sumie’s voice spins gracefully around, intricately weaving each piece together into the stunning closer that is “Sailor Friends.” … read more

Review: Sunwolf – Angel Eyes

Review: Sunwolf – Angel Eyes
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The lyrics are cheesy, and the instrumentals would be really well received at a high school house show. There is a lot of simple, cheesy lo-fi out there that is really good, but this album lacks the charm required to turn those weaknesses into strengths. … read more

Review: Synkro – Lost Here EP

Review: Synkro – Lost Here EP
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This EP reflects the softer, more experimental side of dubstep that got its start in the UK. Dreamy vocalist Robert Manos graces half of the EP and makes the album easy to listen to.  … read more

Review: Take Berlin – Lionize EP

Review: Take Berlin – Lionize EP
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Nothing induces a hypnotic state of relaxation like pulses of the gentle, vibrato Wurlitzer notes that fill Lionize. In fact, the dreamlike Wurlitzer, along with a clean acoustic guitar, make up the majority of the album’s instrumentation.  … read more

Review: Teengirl Fantasy – Nun EP

Review: Teengirl Fantasy – Nun EP
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This duo, comprised of Logan Takahashi and Nicholas Weiss, make quite a cohesive pair. “Eric” stands out to me as the strongest track on this EP, launching into a heavy drum and bass breakdown. Nun EP is fairly mellow and more downbeat, which ends up working as either a perfect warm-up or cool-down to an evening. … read more

Review: Soviet Soviet – Fate

Review: Soviet Soviet – Fate
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When Fate begins, the full richness of the music, along with the double-time dance beat, doesn’t prepare me for the voice of Alessandro Costantini. It’s not that his voice doesn’t mesh well with the overall sound—it does. It’s perfect for the crunchy bass that sits on the forefront of the album’s mixes, allowing the guitars to create texture or melodic leads reminiscent of Holograms’ synth work.  … read more

Review: SQÜRL – EP #2

Review: SQÜRL – EP #2
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Coming off a brilliant collaboration with lute revivalist Josef van Wissem, this largely instrumental, sprawling compilation of psychedelic guitar explorations of dissonance and repetition is as good as any Jarmusch film: disconnected, adjacent to popular culture and unmistakably idiosyncratic. … read more

Review: Storm of Light – Nations to Flames

Review: Storm of Light – Nations to Flames
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This album takes a completely different direction with its post-metal influences than I was expecting. Instead of the gentle surges and mellow refrains, Nations to Flames takes you by the collar and shakes you again and again with its unrelenting chaos.  … read more

Review: Strike to Survive – Yesterday’s News

Review: Strike to Survive – Yesterday’s News
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Drums and guitar high in the mix with jagged vocals buried a little beneath makes for a compelling listen, sort of similar to Drive Like Jehu or maybe even the first Bronx album (check the Refused-via-Stooges riffing on the title track). … read more