Monday, March 31, 2014

REVIEW: Marriages "Kitsune"


Read the full review on Stereokiller.com

"With only one EP under their collective belt and exactly one trek of the proper (read: beyond the state of California) United States, it would be easy to label Los Angeles' dreampop three-piece Marriages as yet another upstart act in the shoegaze revival of the current decade. The reality, of course, is that vocalist/guitarist Emma Ruth Rundle and bassist Greg Burns have both spent the better part of their lives toiling around with some rather notable acts, culminating in their work with post-rock innovators Red Sparowes..."

Thursday, March 27, 2014

REVIEW: Bayside "Cult"



Read the full review on Stereokiller.com

"For well over 10 years and six full length albums, Bayside has consistently pumped out a catalog of music that, for better or worse, could only be produced by Bayside. Their sound has become defined: soaring vocal melodies, an upbeat and driving rhythm section, and virtuoso-esque guitar work that at times could make even the most shred-heavy metal band blush. After a four record stint with Victory Records and a one album experiment with major label Wind-Up, Bayside has never faltered with their formula. This presents a conundrum of sorts for long time listeners: with a sound that hasn't' changed much over a decade, how well does their angst ridden approach still resonate with a fan base that now largely consists of college graduates and consumers who have already digested 5 records (along with an acoustic album and an EP of covers) worth of their music?"

REVIEW: Alcest "Shelter"



Read the full review on Stereokiller.com

"2014, not unlike 1992, appears to be the year of shoegaze. Just as "90s emo" was last year, it is the buzzword of choice for up and coming acts, regardless of how much or how little they may have in common with the forefathers of the genre. Deafheaven doesn't really sound much like Chapterhouse or Lush, no matter what their press releases and countless reviewers may lead listeners to believe, and it appears the title may be a misnomer for France's Alcest as well..."

REVIEW: I Am the Avalanche "Wolverines"



Read the full review on Stereokiller.com

"It's truly hard to believe that I Am The Avalanche has been kicking for a decade now. Stranger, still, is it difficult to fathom that with their breakthrough third record "Wolverines", I Am The Avalanche have surpassed the lifetime of vocalist Vinnie Caruana's seminal Long Island pop punk group The Movielife. Yet here we are in 2014, digesting IATA's most important record yet..."

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Hello!

My name is Rich Anthony. I'm a 20-something fledgling author floating around the great state of Pennsylvania. I review records for Stereokiller.com on a part time basis. Here on Swooshgazer, you'll find various reviews of shows and records, as well as news and consumables (songs, videos, etc), posted by myself and some of my friends and peers. This blog exists to fill a void in today's music "journalism". In a world of instant information, it seems we've lost the art of in depth music critique. Music, in itself, is art in one of its purest forms, and our mission statement is to insure that our writing is based on the actual absorption of this art, rather than a few listens in-passing or a previous relationship with the artist. Thanks for reading.

If you'd like to be featured on swooshgazer, please contact me at weallhaveplots@gmail.com.


REVIEW: Nothing "Guilty of Everything"

Nothing-Guilty of Everything
(2014, Relapse)
1. Hymn to the Pilory
2. Dig
3. Bent Nail
4. Endlessly
5. Somersault
6. Get Well
7. Beat Around the Bush
8. B&E
9. Guilty of Everything

In early 1990, British critic Steve Sutherland wrote a piece for Melody Maker about a new sound quickly enveloping London and surrounding areas. The cacophony of washed out guitars, drenched in reverb and delay, was already being referred to as "shoegazing", a nod to the physical stance its purveyors took while performing. Sutherland, taking note of the incestual nature of many of these acts, referred to it as "the scene that celebrates itself". Bands like Chapterhouse, Lush, and Slowdive (the Jawbreaker equivalent of shoegaze folklore) were a tight knit group that often attended each others' shows and routinely filled in for one another at various gigs to little fanfare.

Flash forward to 2014: 20 years after the breakup and subsequent return of Slowdive and My Bloody Valentine, a new generation of musicians have seemingly come full circle and rediscovered this small British subsect of noise. Philadelphia's Nothing, led by former Horror Show frontman Dominic Palmero, represent the prototypical makeup of today's shoegaze groups. The band has featured a rotating cast of characters over the years (including frequent tourmate and Whirr mainman Nick Bassett) and toured nationally with acts such as Deafheaven (who, if you've been a sleeping under a rock, are probably the most critically acclaimed group since the fucking Beatles), garnering a buzz that eventually leads us to the release of Guilty of Everything on Philadelphia's own Relapse Records. 

Guilty of Everything harkens back to the glory days of noisy rock and roll, forgoing contrived attempts at innovation in favor of mastering their chosen craft. First single and standout track "Dig" is a four minute audial version of the "shoegaze" Wikipedia page, covering the entire spectrum of the genre. From the dual male/female lead vocal buried underneath a wall of guitar to the distorted bass line, Nothing immediately time warps to 1992, presumably opening up for Ride in a smokey Reading pub.

"Bent Nail" and "Get Well" up the tempo and imply a heavy Chapterhouse influence. "Get Well", in particular, wears the band's hardcore punk influences on its sleeve. The track demonstrates why shoegaze is the next logical step for bored hardcore kids; it's loud and introspective, and its power lies within its dynamics. Never loud for the sake of being loud, Nothing rely heavily on deafening melodies and powerful crescendos for the majority of GoE.

Standout track "Somersault" explores the full spectrum of these dynamics, ending with a chilling decrescendo that couples a thumping floor tom and droning feedback. Poshlost holdover "B&E" features a prominent lead guitar melody, a device Nothing and their peers employ often in favor of letting vocals carry tracks. However, when Nothing ventures away from the confines of layering, they truly shine. Title track "Guilty of Everything" is led by an opening clean guitar, highlighting the beauty and simplicity of Palmero's songwriting before erupting into a river of noise that cascades for a full two minutes before the album abruptly ends.

Nothing are, for better or for worse, the quintessential act of the shoegaze revival. While fellow "nugaze" standouts Alcest and Deafheaven attempt to push the proverbial envelope by mixing genres (black metal, in both cases, and dreampop in the case of Alcest's latest), Nothing seems more interested in the art of the pop song. They are the new Slowdive, for all intents and purposes, a comparison which Palermo would likely welcome (although he did refer to Slowdive frontman Neil Halstead as "kind of a fucking cunt" in a recent Noisey interview). Indeed, while members often give praise to the scene's forefathers in interviews, it is clear Nothing and their peers are more interested in furthering their own takes on the genre than living in comparison of their influences. They will continue to celebrate each other via touring, adulating Facebook posts and meddling side projects such as Death of Lovers, a joint Whirr/Nothing project that, like Nothing themselves, is still very much in its infancy. 

If the quality of Guilty of Nothing is any indication of what's to come, the Americanized "nugaze" revolution is poised to grow even bigger this year.