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High Vis – “Drop Me Out”
The driver’s seat is High Vis’, and they know their path clearly on the intentional punk anthem off their new album, ‘Guided Tour’.
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Regional Justice Center – “MORAL DEATH SENTENCE”
Not everything is what it seems, yet it’s a cruelty to forever be found guilty of something that you’re not, and no one knows that better than RJC.
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Show Me the Body feat. High Vis – “Stomach”
Fire meets fire makes for the perfect compliment as the experimental hardcore punk trio and the High Vis frontman spit intestinal acid into anything standing between them.
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Buzz Sound: julie
The enigmatic Los Angeles trio are restoring shoegaze to its more corrosive form rather than hiding their flaws behind a wall of filtered, dreamy textures.
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Special Interest – “Nothing Grows Here”
There’s power in reminding yourself of your creative autonomy against the noise on the New Orleans industrial synth-punks’ new single.
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Pharmakon – “METHANOL DOLL”
From dust to dust? Not quite so fast, as Margaret Chardiet breaks down the realities of port-mortem decomposition on the latest offering from ‘Maggot Mass’.
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Touché Amoré – “Hal Ashby”
If life is but a misguided catastrophe, then Jeremy Bolm casts himself as its lead actor on the latest preview off the post-hardcore band’s new album, ‘Spiral In A Straight Line’.
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R.J.F. feat. Mary Lattimore – “Virgos in the Grass”
The collaborative single between the CEREMONY frontman and the experimental harpist captures ambient extraterrestrial soundwaves from down here.
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Planes Mistaken for Stars – “Fix Me”
The first single from Planes Mistaken for Stars’ final album is definitely the seminal post-hardcore and metal band at their most awesomely broken.
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Kareem Rahma’s Tiny Gun – “Baby I Could Never Win”
The NYC post-punk band led by the ‘Subway Takes’ comedian are no joke when it comes to banging out a sincere jam that shows their hand on the lead single off their debut EP, ‘No Worries If Not’.
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Recommended Album: Peel Dream Magazine – ‘Rose Main Reading Room’
Whether you find meditation through sound, words, or scenery, the fourth LP from the Los Angeles-based experimental pop band is a place where you can go to build your own corner of a personal archive paradise.
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Broadcast – “Come Back to Me (Demo)”
As the message returns to sender, so does Trish Keenan to us on this unearthed Broadcast demo.