Categories
Band/Artist Profile New Album Review

Album Review: “Unreal Unearth” by Hozier

Andrew Hozier-Byrne, better known as Hozier, first captivated the world in 2013 with the international success of his debut track, “Take Me to Church” – a powerful, mid-tempo soul song that addresses difficult socio-political realities of the time.

Since then, the Irish native has achieved musical acclaim with a slew of inter-genre chart-topping hits in rock, blues, folk, pop and dance.

With the release of a third album, “Unreal Unearth”, Hozier caps a decade of stellar lyricism and expert musicianship with a deeply introspective love letter to the humanity of humanity where he seamlessly shape-shifts between familiar genres and dives into a distinctly new soundscape: soft and ethereal.

Categories
Weekly Charts

Top Charts 8/29/23

Top Charts

#ArtistRecordLabel
112 RODSIf We Stayed AliveAmerican Dreams/Husky Pants
2ALLEGRA KRIEGERI Keep My Feet On The Fragile PlaneDouble Double Whammy
3BEN FOLDSWhat Matters MostNew West
4MAN ON MANProvincetownPolyvinyl
5STEADY HANDSCheap FictionLame-O
6ASHER WHITENew Excellent WomanBa Da Bing!
7BEING DEADWhen Horses Would RunBayonet
8FLY ANAKINSkinemaxxx (Side A)Lex
9KARI FAUXREAL B*TCHES DON’T DIEDrink Sum Wtr
10PALEHOUNDEye On The BatPolyvinyl
11PARIS TEXASMid AirParis Texas/The Orchard
12PARTY DOZENThe Real WorkTemporary Residence Limited
13SQUIDO MonolithWarp
14THE SMILE“Bending Hectic” [Single]XL
15YES YES A THOUSAND TIMES YESSupertinyinfinitedansReally Rad
16ANGELO DE AUGUSTINEToil And TroubleAsthmatic Kitty
17BILLY WOODS AND KENNY SEGALMapsBackwoodz Studioz/Fat Possum
18DEAR DERRICK“Love” [Single]Only Popcorn/9 To 5
19HAVIAH MIGHTYCrying CrystalsMighty Gang
20KASSA OVERALLANIMALSWarp
21MOKA ONLYIn And Of ItselfUrbnet
22PANCHIKOFailed At Math(s)Self-Released
23SKIIFALLWOIIYOIE TAPES Vol. 2 – Intense CityRCA
24SLY5THAVE AND JSWISSSomebody’s Gotta Do ItTru Thoughts
25THE AQUADOLLSCharmedAqua Babe
26AJ SUEDEOil On CanvasKnowhatimean Incorporated
27BONNY DOONLet There Be MusicAnti-
28CHAMPSRide The Morning GlassBMG
29CHERRY GLAZERR“Ready For You” [Single]Secretly Canadian
30CHERRY GLAZERR“Soft Like A Flower” [Single]Secretly Canadian

Top Adds

ArtistRecordLabel
1TURNSTILE AND BADBADNOTGOODNew Heart Designs [EP]Roadrunner
2ARMED, THEPerfect SaviorsSargent House
3TELEMARKETAd NauseamCloud/Science Project
4GENESIS OWUSUSTRUGGLEROurness/AWAL
5RATBOYSThe WindowTopshelf
6KING KRULESpace HeavyMatador
Categories
Weekly Charts

Underground Charts 8/29/23

Underground Charts

#ArtistRecordLabel
1FLY ANAKINSkinemaxxx (Side B)Lex
2BILLY WOODS AND KENNY SEGALMapsBackwoodz Studioz/Fat Possum
3HAVIAH MIGHTYCrying CrystalsMighty Gang
4KARI FAUXREAL B*TCHES DON’T DIEDrink Sum Wtr
5PARIS TEXASMid AirParis Texas/The Orchard
6SKIIFALLWOIIYOIE TAPES Vol. 2 – Intense CityRCA
7DIZThe Way Forward Is Not The Way HomeSelf-Released
8FLAMINGOSIS, EHIOROBOBliss StationSelf-Released
9FRESH KILSDisclaimerUrbnet
10MOKA ONLYIn And Of ItselfUrbnet

Underground Adds

#ArtistRecordLabel
1MICK JENKINSThe PatienceBMG
2SUBSTANTIAL“The Long Route featuring Tamara Wellons & DJ Jav” [Single]Substantial Art &
3ARMAND HAMMER“Trauma Mic” feat. Pink Siifu [Single]Fat Possum
Categories
Weekly Charts

Chainsaw Charts 8/29/23

Chainsaw Charts

#ArtistRecordLabel
1JUDICIARYFlesh + BloodClosed Casket Activities
2STATIC ABYSSAborted From RealityPeaceville
3NECROFIERBurning Shadows in the Southern NightSeason of Mist
4KARRAS“Roland Doe” [Single]M-Theory
5WAXENDie Macht Von HassenMoribund
6KNOCKED LOOSE“Deep In The Willow” b/w “Everything Is Quiet Now” [Single]Pure Noise
7ACACIA STRAIN, THEStep Into The LightRise
8MOUTHBREATHER“You Try To Die” [Single]Self-Released
9MEURTRIERES“Rubicon” [Single]Gates of Hell
10ZULUA New TomorrowFlatspot

Chainsaw Adds

#ArtistRecordLabel
1TILL THE DIRTOutside The SprialNuclear Blast
2CREAKDepth PerceptionProsthetic
3OWDWYR“Lagos” [Single]Self-Released
4INHUMEDFeasted Upon Like CarrionSelf-Released
5ROCKY’S PRIDE AND JOYAll The Colours of DarknessElectric Valley
6ENTIERROThe Gates of HellSelf-Released
Categories
Weekly Charts

Afterhours Charts 8/29/23

Afterhours Charts

#ArtistRecordLabel
1AHEROThunder and RainStratford Ct.
2AQUASINEMsgboxSelf-Released
3DREAMWEAVERBlue GardenSelf-Released
4RUADOISProibido Estacionar Vol 2 – Live Set [EP]Self-Released
5FAEX OPTIMCrystal PleasuresWerra Foxma
6MILD SORROW INTEGRATEDVariety List (for pipon)Next Year’s Snow
7GEORGE CLANTONOoh Rap I Ya100% Electronica
8APHEX TWINBlackbox Life Recorder 21f/In A Room7 F760 [EP]Warp
9GUPICheck-InSelf-Released
10MUNYA“Once Again” feat. Kainalu [Single]Luminelle

Afterhours Adds

#ArtistRecordLabel
1AHEROThunder and RainStratford Ct.
2AQUASINEMsgboxSelf-Released
3MILD SORROW INTEGRATEDVariety List (for pipon)Next Year’s Snow
4MISO EXTRAMSG [EP]Transgressive/PIAS
5LUIZA LIAN7 Estrelas | Quem Arrancou O Céu?ZZK
Categories
Playlists

My End-of-Summmer Playlist

I like school, I really do; and I’m glad to be back at it.

But there’s something about the loss that’s involved — the loss of free time, the loss of beachside hang-outs, the loss of schematic summer-ness — that’s always painful to swallow.

Not only is it always an adjustment starting a new semester, but this fall sees a particularly vexatious surge of extra freshmen. The resulting collapse of the sanctity of college common areas weighs heavily on the psyche.

As a self-identified Person Who Listens to Too Much Music, music was a vital tool for me this week.

Below is a compilation of tracks I, as well as others, have used to soften the proverbial blow of our returning academic responsibilities.

Good luck out there!

The Playlist

If you’re anything like me (combination hyperactive-inattentive), then you tend not to stick with one particular flavor of auditory stimulus whilst weathering the tribulations of back-to-school season.

While I primarily market myself as a goth, I’ve got a real soft spot for Carhartt-Marlboro-septum ring-type garage/art/post-punk rock.

Weird songs that sound like the way cigarette smoke smells and mansplaining feels touch me in the most deepest recesses of my calcified English major heart.

It really takes the edge off.

Here are some highlights:

  • “Troglodyte” – Viagra Boys

The third track on their 2022 album “Cave World,” “Troglodyte” tickles my brain with its silly, borderline-industrial beats. The melody reminds me of “Frogstrap,” another beloved track from their 2018 album “Street Worms.”

What I like about Viagra Boys is how vocalist Sebastian Murphy always seems to be just on the cusp of madness. I think you can extrapolate the overarching relevance of that concept.

Not a new song by any means, but a similarly brain-tickly one that I find I can easily get lost in. The beats are rhythmic but unobstrusive, fading into the background or punctuating the present at the listener’s behest. It’s pleasant, easy listening for someone who so desperately needs to distance themselves from the half-dozen new syllabi they just acquired.

IDLES is like Viagra Boys but from an alternate universe. This cover of a Gang of Four classic also sounds like it’s from an alternate universe, which is great when you yourself wish you were from an alternate universe where you were already finished with college.

These are Black Midi’s two top songs for a reason. Pulled from their 2022 album “Hellfire,” these tracks occupy a strange dimension between the 1940s and the 2020s. I can still remember seeing this band live and witnessing throngs of hipsters emphatically mosh to a quirky jilting guitar.

I was Jockstrappilled by the former GM of WKNC, DJ Cow Ball. She caught me at a particularly weak moment in which my ADHD was unmedicated and I was in an introductory film class. As one can expect, I quickly amassed over 100 streams.

I never know how to describe Jockstrap to people. Deeply experimental, enigmatic and hauntingly sweet, every Jockstrap song is a multilayered amalgam of sounds and sensations that will surely take your mind off the terror of The Future.

Closing Thoughts

When writing blog post playlists, I tend to keep them short. This is because I prefer to offer little morsels of stimuli rather than formidable hours-long chunks of obscure tracks.

By Rodrigo Curi on Unsplash

It’s also because I tend to listen to songs like people chew gum, mashing them obsessively between my teeth and squeezing out every last modicum of flavor. I’ll listen to a single song for hours until I’ve fully exhausted its capacity to generate dopamine.

I’m sure, in some broad and abstract way, this theme applies to the college experience.

Categories
New Album Review

Memorrhage’s “Memorrhage” Album Review

ALBUM: “Memorrhage”

RELEASE YEAR: 2023

LABEL: Big Money Cybergrind

BEST TRACKS: “Memory Leak”, “Exit”, “Brain Wield”

FCC: Some tracks have explicit content.

The rage and passion in Memorrhage’s self-titled release still has its dirty, disastrous cybernetic probes stuck in my brain after listening to it three months ago. The Nü-Metal inspired sounds and highly electronic atmosphere the whole album exudes fits into a niche of metal music I never considered I needed for my ears. 

Memorrhage is just a side project done by prolific metal artist Gary Brents. He has been (and still is) a part of Cara Neir, Gonemage, and has been part of multiple other bands over the years. Brents experimented with a multitude of music genres to achieve the sound of Brents’ “tribute to growing up with nu-metal in the 90s/00s” (As stated on Memorrhage’s Bandcamp bio).

But enough about that. Let’s dive into the album.

“Memory Leak”

Each song on this album tells its own narrative. Each is in their own Sci-Fi cyber-hellscape. To start the album off, “Memory Leak” is telling us about a rogue videogame entity wreaking havoc in the digital world through a data leak. Bizarre, I know, but look (and listen of course) to these lyrics:

“It starts with a flicker and an itch

In my dreams and the corner of my eye

Then it’s all over my skin, it’s scalding

A million voices screaming

And I can’t make them stop

I can see the circuits breaking

It lost its mind to technicolor

Dreams of cloaking schemes”

Lyrics taken from “Memory Leak” by Memorrhage

Memorrhage’s horrid beauty forces itself through your ears and makes you understand the emotion and artistry of pain coming from this odd perspective. The brutal sounds drew me into this track at first and then diving into the strange world building in the lyricism made me go slack-jawed and wide eyed in appreciation of the thought and love poured into “Memory Leak”.

“Exit”

And that doesn’t change throughout the whole album. Each song is filled with love and raw emotion that drives further from your expectations at every turn. In “Exit” the pitter-patter, then builds to explosive vocal screams is so good at exciting me for the ‘boom’ I experience at the beginning of the song every time. Any time I want to feel an explosive force of energy course its way under my skin and into my nerves, I flip on this track and start jittering just at the start. 

“Brain Wield”

So… track eight of this album brings us to a particularly heavy variety of instrument and technical diversity compared to the other tracks on this album. “Brain Wield” is listed as the track with the most guest appearances with a total of nine different artists playing a role in the creation of this track.

From Mr. Rager, a DJ makin’ brain ripping record scratches, to a slew of metal vocals coming from Brent’s connections in the industry, “Brain Wield” seems to be the most technically advanced track and I believe it pays off in a big way. 

Memorrhage combines Nü-Metal, some glitch elements, and one of my favorite 90’s genres: turntablism. “Brain Wield” also has a few spoken narrative elements weaved in to help tell the story of this song too (you can read a synopsis of it on the Bandcamp page that is linked above).

All of these additions to this one track are wonderful tools to aid in storytelling and don’t inhibit listeners from obtaining the emotional wasteland this album continues to shove into our ears. 

The Other “Scraps”:

This isn’t to say the other tracks on this album are lame or don’t have the same pull the previous three do, but the magnetism of the aforementioned tracks are so great that I don’t have enough time and space to dive into what makes each song in this album so sickeningly pleasing to me. 

I’ll instead give quick one-liner description for a few tracks:

Reek” is just that: an offensive odor that doesn’t leave your nose but still leaves you addicted to it.

Finesse” includes high pitched electronic bleeps and heart stopping pauses leaving my adrenaline coming to jolting starts and stops.

Utility” has the classic Nü-Metal choruses mixed with hard record scratches and alluring space opera ballad content.

Finale:

This whole album is a unique take on the Nü-Metal genre and I think it does a great job of improving and inventing new sounds within the genre that might’ve inhibited it from reaching greater renown in the past. The glitch-techno aspects of this album are huge draws to me as it feels like a ginormous Sci-Fi adventure in a gorier version of a “Blade Runner” type universe (but far more interesting, sorry Philip K. Dick). 

Memorrhage’s opening album holds great promise to inspire old and new artists alike to return to old, worn-out genres of metal that could use some new sounds and approaches. I am excited to see where Gary Brents takes this project and to see the impact it might have on future sounds in metal.

Categories
Band/Artist Profile Classic Album Review

Artist Spotlight: Omerta

I didn’t even know Omerta existed until December of last year when I and two other WKNC DJs took the drive to Greensboro to see Loathe at Hangar 1819.

Though they weren’t headliners, their captivating stage presence and savage energy riveted me. Following the show, I immediately went home and listened to their entire discography.

Five times over.

America’s Most-Hated Boy Band

Based in Houston, Texas, Omerta fuses 90s metalcore with vaporwave and cybergrind whatever those words mean to create a uniquely hardcore sound.

Photo by Sam Moghadam Khamseh on Unsplash

With a website still under construction and an enigmatic style reminiscent of 2010s tumblr-era “girlcore” aesthetic, Omerta is an up-and-coming brand bringing an air of innovation to the scene.

“Hyperviolence”

Released as the band’s debut album in 2020, Hyperviolence is vicious and vile in all of the best ways.

With a runtime of just under twenty minutes, the album passes by in a feverish haze.

The album’s multiplicity of styles serves as a testament to the band’s experimental nature. Each song has a distinct sound and draws from a combination of stylistic methods.

The album’s opening track, “Payback,” has a trap metal slant while the final track, “Hyperviolence,” leans towards a metalcore style.

“Garbage,” the 4th track on the album, has clear contemporary emo influences.

This blending of styles makes each track particularly engaging.

Every time I listen, I notice something new.

“Antiamorous”

Omerta’s most recent single, “Antiamorous,” is a testament to the band’s stylistic metamorphosis.

Featuring former Spider Gang member JOHNNASCUS, the song hints at an interesting new direction for the band’s discography.

Aptly described as genre-defying, the 3-minute song is almost epsodic in nature.

A mix of metalcore, trap metal, emo and other niche influences, “Antiamorous” literalizes the term “listening experience.”

Categories
Miscellaneous

Dipping Toes into Raleigh’s Local Scenes

Hello all! I am Ben/ DJ chef. I have done some writing for WKNC’s blog before, but these next few months I am going to be doing something different than my usual variety of articles.

Once a week I will be focusing on an aspect of Raleigh or the surrounding Triangle area’s local artists, bands, and venues. I will be exploring what makes these performances or places a unique staple to this section of the Carolinas.

Venues:

Last summer I had tons of fun writing a silly article about some of Raleigh’s parks, and since then I wanted to do similar articles by exploring the Triangle’s music scene via its venues, sounds, and smells (of food of course).

I have some specific spaces in mind that I want to get to know better and to share my experience at a few of Raleigh’s staple music venues, like The Pour House, which has been one of my favorite spots to take friends and go see smaller shows in a low-key environment. I witnessed a wonderful country and americana performance by Joshua Hedley and Lauren Morrow. Also, I had my ears shredded to a fine liquid by one of the loudest performances I’ve had the pleasure of being present at with AUGURS at The Pour House in May. 

A few venues I plan to experience in full over the next few weeks are Slims, a little bar and very tight space for the best intimate crowd experiences; Local 506, a Chapel Hill spot that many hardcore (HC) bands perform at; The Pinhook, a Durham venue that I’ve been to once and really enjoyed – it reminded me The Pour House; and of course I will do my best to visit more places I haven’t heard of yet too.

Record Companies:

Another aspect of this series I want to dive into are the local record companies based in the Triangle area. I will see and experience the investments people are making in music that are right here in this area. For example, Sorry State Records is based right here in Raleigh and I’d love to pick up on the pulse of music they encourage, and what kind of sounds they want to blossom.

Local Music:

Of course I want to continue unfolding my love for HC bands around here too because this section of North Carolina has great potential for an even larger audience for these bands and artists. I believe we already have a great foothold in this genre with bands like Fading Signal, Super Reg, and Corrosion of Conformity

But don’t worry, I won’t be focusing solely on HC and metal, but I’ll return to my roots and spread my enjoyment of local artists with some country twang, bubbly pop, or even smooth jazzy styles. 

I really want to show how much Raleigh’s music scene has to offer those who want to explore it. This city and the entire Triangle area is full of a wide variety of folks that help keep the multitude of flavors swirling and shifting to new directions. Hopefully y’all want to adventure forth into this music scene with me.

Categories
Weekly Charts

Top Charts 8/22/23

Top Charts

#ArtistRecordLabel
1HOME IS WHEREthe whalerWax Bodega
2SQUIDO MonolithWarp
3YVES TUMORPraise A Lord Who Chews But Which Does Not Consume; (Or Simply, Hot Between Worlds)Warp
412 RODSIf We Stayed AliveAmerican Dreams/Husky Pants
5ALLEGRA KRIEGERI Keep My Feet On The Fragile PlaneDouble Double Whammy
6YES YES A THOUSAND TIMES YESSupertinyinfinitedansReally Rad
7ANGELO DE AUGUSTINEToil And TroubleAsthmatic Kitty
8BEN FOLDSWhat Matters MostNew West
9FEEBLE LITTLE HORSEGirl With FishSaddle Creek
10MAN ON MANProvincetownPolyvinyl
11PURRWho Is Afraid Of Blue?Anti-
12TENNISPollenMutually Detrimental/Thirty Tigers
13DEER TICKEmotional ContractsATO
14HAVIAH MIGHTYCrying CrystalsMighty Gang
15PANCHIKOFailed At Math(s)Self-Released
16PARTY DOZENThe Real WorkTemporary Residence Limited
17SIGUR ROSÁTTABMG
18STEADY HANDSCheap FictionLame-O
19ARCAkick iiiiXL
20BILLY WOODS AND KENNY SEGALMapsBackwoodz Studioz/Fat Possum
21CORVAIRBound To BePaper Walls
22DARKSOFTBeigeificationLook Up
23KARI FAUXREAL B*TCHES DON’T DIEDrink Sum Wtr
24MAGAZINE BEACHConstant SpingtimeSelf-Released
25MOKA ONLYIn And Of ItselfUrbnet
26PARIS TEXASMid AirParis Texas/The Orchard
27R.A.P. FERREIRA5 to the Eye with StarsRuby Yacht
28SAMPA THE GREATAs Above, So BelowLoma Vista/Concord
29WAX TAILORFishing For AccidentsLab’oratoire
30WEDNESDAYRat Saw GodDead Oceans/Secretly Group

Top Adds

#ArtistRecordLabel
1CAUTIOUS CLAYKARPEHBlue Note
2CHERRY GLAZERR“Ready For You” [Single]Secretly Canadian
3CHERRY GLAZERR“Soft Like A Flower” [Single]Secretly Canadian
4ANGEL DUST“Racecar” [Single]Pop Wig
5POOL KIDS AND POOLPool Kids // POOL [EP]Skeletal Lightning
6PALEHOUNDEye On The BatPolyvinyl
7GABBY AND THE GONDOLASPollyannaSelf-Released
8MOM ROCKNow That’s What I Call Mom RockSelf-Released