Furious indie-pop anthems combine across the record with psych and prog influences, demonstrating the wealth of influences the band feed off and their deep musicality.
Something to Consume, Ava Schrobilgen, Chloe de St. Aubin, Ellie Livingston, and Kate Halter fight against the inescapable consumption that surrounds life.
Their mesmeric rock formula with lived-in intuition and collage-like composition, delivering jagged, experimental songs that feel both spontaneous and meticulously perfected.
Four blokes from England in ghillie suits. The title lays out their thesis, and then they deliver on it -- squelched-synth tales of our dark, degrading times. Sounds like Chrome doing non-stop dance floor bangers. Way better than Viagra Boys.
Pennsylvania quartet Halestorm are back with their second full-length record. Musically diverse and emotionally revealing, the album resonates with a newfound poignancy that takes Halestorm to a new level of creative achievement.