Showing posts with label Oregon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oregon. Show all posts

Monday, 23 October 2023

Swiss Army Wife


Swiss Army Wife are a four-piece punk/emo band from Portland, Oregon that formed in 2020. Following two early EP's, their debut full-length came out in January of this year. Medium Gnarly is a collection of noodly midwestern emo with gruff, often borderline screamed vocals Their indisputably fun energy paired with some personal yet relatable lyricism makes this the album equivalent of dying with a smile, or something like that. It harkens back to the revival heyday of bands like Free Throw, You Blew It!, Glocca Morra, and Gulfer, alongside the raw pop punk energy of Jeff Rosenstock. They still manage to things fresh, with the screamo-tinged "FLCL" or atmospheric latter half of "No More Drugs". If any of that sounds appealing to you, this should absolutely not be missed. Enjoy.

1. Area Of Expertise
2. Heliocentric
3. Fake Blood

1. Telecaster
2. Origami
3. One Hour Photo
4. Your Bathroom

1. hold ur hand (The Beatles cover)

1. This # Is No Longer In Service
2. FLCL
3. Halloween
4. New Best Friend
5. No More Drugs
6. CBS At 7:00
7. Your Bathroom
8. Aight, I'mma Head Out

1. Swiss Army Wife - Idaho
2. Swiss Army Wife - Mosquito
3. Kerosene Heights - All Your Friends
4 Kerosene Heights - Salvador Dolly Parton

Tuesday, 7 February 2023

Jade Dust



Jade Dust are a five-piece hardcore punk band from Portland, Oregon that formed in 2021. Following a demo, they put out two fantastic EP's last year, both of which I somehow managed to miss until now. This band is fantastic, and call back to one of my favourite eras in punk (as you probably can tell), the late 80's to early 90's DC scene including bands like Swiz, Ignition, Marginal Man, Shudder To Think and Dag Nasty. Though the influence there is apparent, Jade Dust manage to make that sound distinctly modern, while still emulating the energy of those legacy acts, making for melodic hardcore in its truest, most bare-bones definition. Their last EP was a co-release between Extinction Burst and the legendary Ebullition Records, which is just another example of this band being the best of both worlds. Enjoy.

1. Jammaastyr
2. Stay
3. Signal Towers
4. Lie And Wait
5. Fucking Nightmare

1. Signal Towers
2. Margin of Error
3. Embrace The Hours
4. Jammaastyr
5. Stay
6. Learn To Scream

1. Wild Geese
2. Lie And Wait
3. Waking Nightmare
4. Phoenix
5. Empty Tomes
6. Levitate
7. Weightless
8. Absolution

Saturday, 20 August 2022

Life At These Speeds


Life At These Speeds were a four-piece post-hardcore/emo band from Portland, Oregeon that were around from 2003 to 2008. They put out two full-lengths and a handful of splits in that time. Like I seem to say so often now, this band has been soiely missed on this blog for years now. With their bright, urgent energy, and mix of cutting trebly octave chords with full-bodied dissonance, they're one of the more underrated post-hardcore bands of the 2000's, with both full-lengths being absolutely astounding efforts. They built upon what bands such as Fugazi, Hoover, Mohinder and Shotmaker helped establish in the decade prior, with jittery, urgent energy and mix of cutting trebly octave chords alongside full-bodied dissonance. Vocally, they pull out a scream/shout that perfectly pairs with the desperation of the instrumentals. Glad to finally have this band on here, especially since their stuff isn't available for streaming for whatever reason. Enjoy.

1. You Know To Say Yes
2. Birds and Climates
3. Small Sparks
4. Knives
5. Untitled
6. Writing Love Letters To An Industrialized Nation
7. Submerge
8. Blindfold King
9. Ground Gives Out

1. Life At Theses Speeds - Ice Thanks
2. End On End - Your Heritage Is No Longer Yours

1. Life At These Speeds - Land Filled
2. Sinaloa - Montgomery Express

1. Life At These Speeds - An Instrument For All
2. Life At These Speeds - Building
3. Life At These Speeds - Returned Questions
4. Life At These Speeds - Leaving What I Thought Was Always Left
5. Life At These Speeds - Interior, Motel
6. Science Of Yabra - Call Mom & Ask
7. Science Of Yabra - Bee Marrow
8. Science Of Yabra - Glass Ship

1. A New Design
2. Retina
3. Not So Long Ago
4. To Your Health
5. Going Out
6. Lights Please
7. Blocking Out The Stars
8. Weathered Days
9. Simple Math
10. Author's Name
11. Heavy Hand

1. Thank God - Ahh The Magical 90's
2. Thank God - Lay Down Lula
3. Life At These Speeds - Younger Monkey
4. Life At These Speeds - Older Eagle

Tuesday, 28 June 2022

Senza

Senza are a three-piece hardcore/screamo band from Eugene, Oregon that began in 2014. Their debut album came out in 2019, though I admittedly slept on it until late last year, when I finally gave myself the chance to be blown away by it. Even A Worm Will Turn is a crushing listen from front to back, with a seamless flow from track to track. It pulls from a number of influences, with the spastic nature of screamo and heavy riffs of hardcore. Vocally, they're pretty reminiscent of Jeromes Dream circa Seeing Means More Than Safety. The rhythm section pummels through behind dark, angular guitars all with elements of black metal, courtesy of blast beats and string-shredding tremolo picking. It's a unique and impactful listen that conjures up feelings of unease and tension just to release them in cathartic explosions. I say it a lot and I'll say it again, I highly recommended giving this album a listen. Their previous material is also very solid, but the experience of their full-length in its entirety is definitely the highlight here. This is absolutely fantastic stuff, and I look work to whatever the band has coming next. Enjoy.

1. Kamchatka
2. That Belongs In A Museum
3. Mandatory Waiting Period
4. Empedocies... I Guess?

1. 3

13. How Staggering Is This Realization (Jeromes Dream cover)

Note: Full comp here

1. Senza - Dark Dive / Sentience
2. Senza - Garmonbozia
3. Akira - Evocation
4. Akira - Broken
5. Akira - Wet Dream Guillotine
6. Akira - Night Terrors
7. Akira - Another City On The Map

1. Senza - Provare
2. Senza - SHFFL // The Counterpick To Your Statement
3. Senza - Life After Debt
4. Antiphony - Entr'acte
5. Antiphony - Fletcher
6. Antiphony - Charmain
 7. Antiphony - Walt
8. Antiphony - Jonathan

1. Misornithist
2. Tunnel Vision II

1. Tunnel Vision I
2. Born Of Dirt
3. Misornithist
4. Tunnel Vision II
5. Constant Air Of Casual Indifference
6. American Robin
7. Imposter
8. Sentience
9. Swarm
10. Inner Immolation
11. Even A Worm Will Turn
12. Echoes

1. Drain The Blood
2. Saved From His Grace
3. Cruel End Reflects Cruel Existence
4. Isolation
5. Scrap The Waste

Thursday, 29 October 2020

To Be Gentle


To Be Gentle are a four-piece screamo/post-hardcore band from Eugene, Oregon that began in 2017. In their few years now, they've managed to encapsulate and evolve a sound that's both distinctly their own while paying homage to bands that came before them. Their "earlier" material will definitely bring bands such as The Saddest Landscape, Suis La Lune, and Daïtro to mind, for their melodic and passionately emotive take on the genre. Their most recent material takes a darker turn, with the post-rock leaning Funeral Diner, City Of Caterpillar, and ...Who Calls So Loud joining the mix, with a nod to blackened hardcore/screamo. For such a new band, it's crazy to hear the clear progression in their sound and tightness as a unit.

To Be Gentle are undoubtedly one of the forerunners in the genre now, thus why it felt imperative to at least give them a nod in the ashes of this dying blog. The track "The Thought Of Losing You Terrifies Me" is what first floored me about this band, so if you're looking for one sample of this band, I recommend that. Enjoy.

1. That Which Is Safe
2. Tender Green

1. Understanding Healing
2. All The Things I Was Too Scared To Say
3. We Build Our Castles In The Air
4. Du Sang
5. Road To Himeji
6. But A Sound
7. Tender Green
8. An Amputation
9. That Which Is Safe
10. The Hand That Rests On My Shoulder
11. One Day We Will No Longer Hurt
12. To Be Gentle

1. Live at Gamut

1. Flesh and Blood, Bone And Dream
2. If You Are Reading This
3. Insurmountable
4. 7/14/19
5. The Thought Of Losing You Terrifies Me

1. I Love You And I Am Sorry

1. To Be Gentle - Every Day
2. To Be Gentle - An Ardent Light
3. sowithout. - tinyhands2therescue
4. sowithout. - synonymsforsad

1. Indisposed - Antiquate The Argument
2. Indisposed - Indisposed
3. To Be Gentle - Ephemeral And Endless
4. To Be Gentle - Aftermath

Thursday, 30 May 2019

Floral Patterns - The Time It Takes To Get From Place To Place And How People Change REVIEW

Photo Credit: Matt Taylor

Floral Patterns are a four-piece screamo band from Portland, Oregon whose debut EP, The Time It Takes To Get From Place To Place And How People Change was released today. This four-track offering is an explosive breath of fresh air, blending the melodic aspects of emo and post-rock into their cathartic screamo foundation. Fans of bands such as Suis La Lune, Pianos Become The Teeth, State Faults, William Bonney, Old Gray and The Saddest Landscape will take an immediate interest in this. Without a doubt this is one of the best EP's I've heard this year, and an incredible start for a band sure to blow up in the near future.

Photo Credit: Thomas Mansanti

The EP opens up with "Decay (Alone)", introducing interpolated film dialogue, giving the listener an immediate emotional crisis before the song has even kicked in. What follows are heavy octave-chords contrasted with clean, gentle arpeggios, while the vocals shout over each other, before descending into an instrumental over more dialogue. This track makes fantastic use of dynamics, with full breaks in momentum with just a single sustained chord before charging back in again. It finally closes out with a monumental crescendo that breaks into disarray, and after just one track I was hooked on this band.

"That Scene In Fight Club Where Edward Norton Looks In The Mirror And Sees Brad Pitt Instead Of Himself" introduces a screamier Listener-esque spoken word segment at the beginning, with a low bass rumble and atmospheric guitar work below it. This builds into one of the most melodic tracks, with the guitars taking a heavy post-rock influence, and the track building and crescendoing instead of following any linear structure. The vocals stand out with one hell of a passionate performance, making the song's 6-minute runtime feel like 6 seconds.

"Before I Self Destruct" features the most broken vocals on this entire EP, which are absolutely heart-wrenching. They are really the main feature on this track, with an incredible performance to boot. The instrumental plays fairly straight-forward, with a descending chord pattern and reverb-washed guitar tones that compliment the song's honest simplicity.

The closing track, "We Can't Stop Here, This Is Marlboro Country" brings back new film excerpts, before erupting into the heaviest Floral Patterns have been thus far. Eventually it falls into a nice bass/drum-lead instrumental break, with sparse guitar work, but heavy reverb shimmer. The screamed vocals pull back in, alternating lines between them. A single breath is given before they fly into a heavy heaven-ward outro crescendo.

You can listen to The Time It Takes To Get From Place To Place And How People Change in full on Bandcamp below. They also have some tour dates coming up with the also-incredible Reveries. More info on those shows can be found below.



Sunday, 26 November 2017

Blowout


Blowout were a four-piece emo/indie/punk band from Portland, Oregon that got started in 2014 and broke up earlier this year. Last year, they put out their fantastic debut (and now sole) full-length, No Beer, No Dad. This is a fantastic album with some clear influences taken from the reverb-soaked melancholic, melodic guitar parts of Rainer Maria, along with the upbeat celebrate-in-the-face-of-distress pop punk of The Promise Ring. Blowout have a great energy, some fantastic lyrics, and put together a solid front-to-back album of indie/emo goodness. Enjoy.

1. Get Loud
2. Don't Wake Grandpa
3. Tune Out
4. Wet And Reckless
5. Tiny Boots

1. Intro
2. Cents Cents Money Money
3. Indiana
4. Interlude
5. Fuck Slang
6. Guts Grown Up
7. Thrashy
8. King PP
9. 1 I Want
10. Green Couch
11. Pound Pit
12. If-Else-If

Sunday, 9 April 2017

Tragedy


Tragedy are a four-piece hardcore/crust punk band that formed in 1995. Originally, they were based out of Memphis, Tennessee, but have since re-located to Portland, Oregon. Members of Tragedy were also in His Hero Is Gone and Deathreat, in addition to a ton of other bands. Since the turn of the century though, they've been killing it as Tragedy. With over a decade of experience, they've never failed to deliver some incredible hardcore with their crust punk roots showing. Their vocals are harshly guttural, while their instrumentals can only be described as intensely melodic, which makes sense if you give them a listen. The've also released almost all their albums through their own label, so they definitely get points for the full DIY. Enjoy.

1. Intro
2. The Point Of No Return
3. Not Fucking Fodder
4. Never Knowing Peace
5. Confessions Of A Suicide Advocate
6. Instrumental
7. Instrumental II
8. The Intolerable Weight
9. You Are an Experiment
10. Products Of A Cold War Depression
11. With Empty Hands Extended
12. Instrumental III
13. Tension Awaiting Imminent Collapse
14. Chemical Imbalance

1. The Ending Fight
2. Life
3. The Waiting

1. Conflicting Ideas
2. Call To Arms
3. Vengeance
4. Recurring Nightmare
5. Beginning Of The End
6. The Lure
7. Night Falls
8. The Day After
9. War Within Us
10. Revengeance
11. To The Dogs
12. No Words

1. Tragedy - No End In Sight
2. Tragedy - None Of Your Business
3. Totalitär - Krossa Elitsystemet 2
4. Totalitär - Förena Er 2

1. To The Dogs
2. The Lure

1. Eyes Of Madness
2. Force Of Law
3. Rabid Panic
4. Deaf And Disbelieving
5. The Hunger
6. Total Vision
7. In Formation
8. Incendiary
9. Crucifer
10. Under The Radar
11. Plan Of Execution

1. No Cemeteries Here
2. Close At Hand
3. The Grim Infinite
4. The Feeding Hour
5. Wail Of Sirens
6. Darker Days Ahead
7. Black Against Night
8. Power Fades
9. To Earth Like Dust