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Pinkshift – “GET OUT”
As always, Pinkshift rip, but also tear a new one into the face of hate on the latest single off their debut LP, ‘Love Me Forever’.
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Palm – “Parable Licker”
The second preview from the Baltimore experimental rocker’s new album, ‘Nicks and Grazes’, is an obtuse tropical detour.
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Wild Pink feat. Julien Baker – “Hold My Hand”
The New York indie rockers carve out genuine comfort in the dark on the latest preview from ‘ILYSM’.
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L.S. Dunes – “Permanent Rebellion”
The post-hardcore supergroup led by Anthony Green are the sum of their parts perfected for the fury of post-pandemic times on the lead single off their debut album, ‘Past Lives’.
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The Callous Daoboys – “The Elephant Man In the Room”
If God is in the room warring with their ideas, then the Callous Daoboys put up an affront with their provocation on the final preview from their new album, ‘Celebrity Therapist’.
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Recommended Album: Hellrazor – ‘Heaven’s Gate’
The second album from the band led by former Speedy Ortiz guitarist Mike Falcone hears the dream of ’90s grunge and noise rock living on in nightmarish form.
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MARTHE – “Victimized”
Described as “Antifascist, feminist and misanthropic,” the latest single from the Italian metal artist hungers from anger and feasts on retribution.
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Mindforce – “Words Fail”
Methodical brutalism delivers the coup de grâce in axe form on the latest single from ‘New Lords’.
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Young Jesus feat. Tomberlin – “Ocean”
Joined by Tomberlin, Young Jesus turn the sea changes of the id into something more than questions of the divine on the lead single off ‘Shepherd Head’.
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Cold Gawd – “Gin”
The latest preview off the Rancho Cucamonga shoegaze band’s sophomore LP, ‘God Get Me the Fuck Out of Here’ drowns beneath a place of no return and finds an unknown bliss in it.
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Alicia Clara – “Only Fools Wish for Love”
The Swiss-Canadian dream-pop songwriter makes it easy to hear how anyone could get caught up in this kind of destructive wishful thinking when it sounds this good.
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Teen Suicide – “new strategies for telemarketing through precognitive dreams”
Noise and nihilism are no stranger to Sam Ray, though distancing his sound from its its most discordant aspects rears a strange peace between existential terror and ease.