Music Recommendations #4
Here’s a reading playlist
Pennywise- Never Gonna Die
I don’t know if I could say that Pennywise are underrated, but they’re criminally under appreciated. They’ve aged gracefully throughout aspects of the mainstream punk world hitting a collective wall. They have an undeniably signature sound and it never fails to progress somehow. It’s rare to find a band that has never released a slump album (even a respectable one with a different singer) and plays on their twelfth album like their livelihood depended on it. Never Gonna Die is a shock to the system. A fascist reality television administration will light a fire in any self respecting punk rock band. They address far more than our president being a dumbass who got in office because of the 2016 election being hacked and hate mongering. I can feel singer Jim Lindberg’s frustration of watching our racist, clickbait instagram circus culture is becoming the norm. Though Pennywise has been pointing this out for almost three decades. Musically Never Gonna Die maintains a healthy diversity in tempo and aggression mixed with Fletcher Dragge’s constantly evolving approach to writing punk riffs and desperately intense chord progressions. As a fan of punk music, I take pride in when the legends can still produce records that exceed expectation. They’re great rather than just being passable. A critic will turn their nose up at this album and probably slag it off as Pennywise just being Pennywise. Take a deeper listen to the composition and songwriting. Punk isn’t going anywhere, you just have to want it.
Released: April 20, 2018
Label: Epitaph
Zeke- Hellbender
Speaking of, if you’re into ridiculously fast rocknroll and Zeke isn’t in your rotation yet, you’re messing up. Zeke will kick your ass, drink all your beer and steal your girlfriend all at the same time. If anyone was feeling a void after Lemmy Kilimister leaving us, listen to this Zeke album. I’ve always felt like Zeke was punk’s best kept secret. After a fourteen year long hiatus they’ve come back with Hellbender. It’s exactly how it sounds and it’s exactly what it looks like: A catchy hyper speed album telling stories of sex, drugs, rocknrolll and partying with the devil. Probably on a motorcycle. It’ll all make sense once you hear it. Be prepared for a fight.
Released: March 30, 2018
Label: Relapse
Courtney Barnett- Tell Me How You Really Feel
I love second albums. They can serve many purposes, but most of the time they’re a response to listeners anticipating something worse or even better from the first album they built a relationship with. Second albums can make or break an artist. Sometimes they do make an underwhelming second effort due to pressure or the fact that you have your entire life to make a first album and maybe a year to make your second. Courtney Barnett created an earnest and concise body of work that will give her career longevity. Sincerity goes a long way. Anybody who’s aware of Courtney Barnett knows that her words are potentially the most important weapon in her arsenal. The songs revolve around getting the words out. This time around, the melody, lyrics and music are all having a more collaborative conversation. All still just as honest and telling of situations most of us couldn’t put into words ourselves. Certainly not four minute songs with a electric guitar. That growth in songwriting resulted in familiar feeling songs that maintain transparency simply by just having something important to say. I feel like Daria would have enjoyed this album. It depicts loneliness and isolation from the world’s insanities. Something I connect to deeply. Emotionally daunting situations that only exacerbate a pre existing anxiety. Questioning yourself and others, maybe even existence itself. There’s nothing easy or simple about being an HSP watching other people enjoying life purely and ignorantly while constantly thinking about everything affects each other. My personal favorite moment on the album was the pairing of songs Nameless, Faceless and I’m Not Your Mother, I’m Not Your Bitch. Both share a sentiment women feel across the planet.
I wanna walk through the park in the dark Men are scared that women will laugh at them I wanna walk through the park in the dark Women are scared that men will kill them
I’m glad we have Courtney Barnett right now. Not to throw the rock savior moniker on her that we did to other Aussie rock acts, but that honesty and poetic nature is something we do need right now.
Released: May 18, 2018
Label: Milk!/Mom + Pop/Marathon Arists
A Perfect Circle- Eat The Elephant
I can already tell this is going to be polarizing. I also feel like it’s going to be further under the radar than expected. Speaking of expectation, also taking a fourteen year along hiatus, fans have already built up five different versions of what they thought they wanted or even deserved to hear from A Perfect Circle in such a long span of time. You’re not the same person fourteen years later. Some people moved on after the wave passed. Others waited patiently, hopefully knowing that it’ll come when the time is appropriate. Eat The Elephant does nothing short of hit all of it’s marks. Anything they did was going to be seen as a disappointment. Having an album predominately centered around a piano doesn’t help that case to the mass public either. Personally, I feel like this is their best album since Thirteenth Step. How does it not delver? They’re still the same epic and emotionally driven band making cinematic music. Some of those elements have only been amplified. The original presentation of the band was bringing together the heavy elements founder Billy Howerdel wanted and the softer ambient moments from singer Maynard Keenan. This time around they found themselves making a more desolate pop album with an orchestra fit to score a film behind them. The progressions have an even more straight forward pop structure and have been stripped down to mainly piano. The guitars are elements of textures adding to the movement of the music rather than being the core focus. Eat The Elephant might be a more direct homage to their influences than the band may have even thought. There’s sounds and vocal deliveries you never would have heard on a Tool or A perfect Circle record a decade ago. But check out The Cure’s Pornogrpahy or Siouxsie and The Banshees Tinderbox and draw the comparisons throughout the years and certainly on this album. It’s all still there. Maynard’s blunt lyricism is an observation of the lows our society has dropped into. Obsession with materialism, believing in false prophets, racism ad how we’ve destroyed the planet with mindlessness and greed are all prevalently woven into every line on the album. It’s a desperate attempt to call out for finding change from within ourselves instead of trying to force it elsewhere. They brought something refreshing back to big rock music without it getting away from them. There’s something important to say, I’m afraid not many people will hear it. At east not right now. The not so discrete perfection in the flow of this album will be appreciated later down the line once judgement becomes less foggy. We’ll just have to live with it for a while until then.
Released: April 20,2018
Label: BMG









