New Music Classic Monday Album Reviews

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Dusty Notes – Meat Puppets

Teenage Fanclub but like not as good? This album isn’t particularly interesting, but its well produced and executed dad rock. Sea of Heartbreak is a goofy lil track tho, probably the highlight. Ill revisit when im 40 and maybe ill like it.

SASAMI – SASAMI

love this!!! Keys player for cherry glazerr. Imagine if bedroom pop was still sad but a little less sad and had more going on. Go listen! 10/10 my pick of the week. “Morning Comes” is kinda groovy gets my heart beating on a little bit.

Cheers – The Wild Reeds

Indie rock no surprises pretty chill kinda stuff but nothing exciting like Hop Along with way less instrumentation. Feels sort of like a distillation of all the big Indie Dream Pop stuff floating around right now.

Hypnos – Xeno & Oaklander

Tangerine Dream-ey stuff, might get added to my study music playlists. Reminds me of that weird midi album Dr. Dog made. Kinda cool! This album kind of sounds like the nightmare windows 98 would have.

L.A.’s Got Me Down – Justus Proffit

If I didn’t know who made this and just heard it randomly I would have thought it was Elliot Smith. HOWEVER, this isn’t some Greta Van Fleet style soulless ripoff; Justus Proffit delivers on this record with a sound that has one foot in 90’s alt and the other foot in contemporary dream pop. Good record, “Split Into” is a favourite track of mine, and I also highly recommend the split EP that Justus Proffit did with Jay Som.

Slow Century – I Was A King

More wannabe Teenage Fanclub, this album even sounds like every track was written while listening to Teenage Fanclub’s Here. Nothing remarkable, but the track “Bubble” shows a little bit of life.

Liv – Daniel Blumberg, Hebronix

Absolutely entrancing. Faux noise bands like Daughters wish they sounded 5% like this good. A rare case of music having an aspect of fear; if a Southern Gothic story had a soundtrack this would be it. This music demands your attention and uses it well.

2 (3?) Quick Album Reviews

Coming back to writing about music because I think it helps me keep track of what I’ve listened to in my head which is something that I have difficulty doing now that my life is actually busy.

Strange Creatures – Drenge

If you, like me, were disappointed by the 2018 IDLES release Joy of Resistance, this release from UK punk outfit Drenge will certainly make up for it. The tracks “This Dance” and “Teenage Love” were especially catchy tracks with memorable punk riffs. Drenge channels some of the heavier and slower punk that IDLES failed to capture on Joy of Resistance, and the later tracks in the album start to fall into laid back guitar and synth tracks in a similar vein to bands like Shame and some of the newer tracks Wand have been releasing. There is a lot of variety in sound and energy to be found on Strange Creatures, making for an enjoyable listen through.

Mazy Fly – Spellling

This album is a great listen, each track has a lot going on and it makes for a very intriguing listen. Some of the sounds on here remind me a little bit of a band called The Moog Cookbook, a synth duo that release covers of various chart topping hits with weird stylings. Regardless of an intentionality it the influence, the timbre on Spelllings tracks leads to a carefree and lighthearted atmosphere. “Dirty Desert Dreams” especially almost sounds like it was played on my childhood toy keyboard. “Golden Numbers” contrasts with the synth tracks nicely, with a guitar track more in line with typical dream-pop. Some of the tracks on Mazy Fly are sparse and rely on Chrystia Cabra’s vocals, while others are filled with a variety of sounds and textures. As much as I hate to use the word haunting, Cabra really does embrace a haunted aesthetic, with the short track “Melted Wings” sounding like something from an art house horror movie soundtrack.

Suspiria (Music for the Luca Guadagnino Film) – Thom Yorke

Speaking of art house horror, the soundtrack to Suspiria has been my go-to study music lately. If you need music that is good for studying, i’ll direct you here, but otherwise I would highly recommend the movie itself instead. I had nightmares about it for a solid week after seeing it, and is one of the best examples of how scary a movie can be just through its cinematography.

 

 

Pretentious Bullshit: 2018 Album Recap

2018 had some bangers. Bops all around over here. Here’s what I liked.

Wide Awake! – Parquet Courts 

I love this band, they could have released anything and I would have put in on here. Luckily Wide Awake! is also their best record by far, front to back amazing songs and the last track Tenderness is a CERTIFIED EARWORM. Also this album wins the award for the best bass-lines of 2018.

Clean – Soccer Mommy

Everything you love about Dream Pop and the songs have more emotion than just melancholy.

Drift – The Men 

It’s like New Order and Alabama Shakes had a baby. It’s a little unfocused and that works in its favour. Entertaining listen.

Constant Image – Flasher

A feel good record right here. Good music for driving around in the fall and feelin’ great.

Basic Behaviour – FRIGS

Whenever I have to describe Post-Punk I think about this band. It has the tone and production you would expect from Post-Punk band, but retains a lot of the energy and rage you might find in Punk or Hardcore.

Beyondless – Iceage

Iceage manages to bring a new sound and style to their music without sacrificing the frantic, heavy guitar work and strong drumming that made me fall in love with their first albums.

Goat Girl – Goat Girl

This may have been my favourite album of the year. While I didn’t spend as much time with it as I did some of the others on this list, I come back to it far more often. Goat Girl pulls from a lot of influences around the Indie, Punk, Americana, and Post-Punk spheres and it results in a unique and engaging album front to back.

Microshift – Hookworms

Lots of solid Noise Pop to be found on this record, with the opener Negative Space being a constant feature in my usual listening rotation since this album dropped.

Little Ugly Girls – Little Ugly Girls

Not only does this record have an amazing backstory that I highly recommend you investigate, It is easily one of the best punk records I have heard in my life. Listen to it if you at all like punk.

NOIR – Smino 

Smino’s 2017 record blkswn easily made my top 5 hip-hop record of all time list, and this new record doesn’t disappoint. While it won’t challenge blkswn’s position on my list, Smino delivered another amazing record that you should definitely give a listen.

 

These are my creamiest of the cropiest records of the year, but there were a lot of other records I really enjoyed this year. I had to limit myself on the Post-Punk releases because so many good ones came out this year. You could honestly go on the similar artists page for FRIGS, The Men, or Flasher and find a bunch of great Post-Punk releases from this year.

Twin Fantasy (2018) was also a record I considered putting on the list above. It was easily one of my favourite records of the year, and I think the time period this year in which I listened to that record is something that will stick in my memory for a long time. Rather than being a favourite of mine this year from an artistic standpoint (not that it doesn’t absolutely have both the quality and uniqueness to equal any album on my list), Twin Fantasy will be the soundtrack to all the moments i’ve had this year. I don’t think any other record from this year holds the same emotional connection I formed with Twin Fantasy over the course of the past year. It was good timing on Will Toledo’s part to release this record when he did, it was a perfect storm to hit me the way it did.

 

Winter

With the snap of a finger the brisk but fresh fall evenings flip over to the quiet dark winter nights I’ve grown used to. The ice and snow that build up on the windowsills reveal a stillness that only exists in those first days; everyone is taking a collective breath before digging into a new routine. The normalcy built up over the summer is disrupted by needing to warm up your car, shovel the walk, and muster the strength to get out of a nice warm bed. Favourite new clothes you’ve collected become temporarily obsolete. Earlier nights and later mornings always attempt to disrupt the inner balance. Winters here always seem to suck, things get harder physically and mentally.

 

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The air in Saskatchewan winters is often filled with two things: blistering cold and people talking about the blistering cold. Everyone sitting behind a countertop at their place of work engages in the same conversation for 8 hours of their day. We all talk about the weather. We call it small talk, but hidden somewhere in the boring pleasantries there is a recognition. The majority of us have to accommodate new things into our routine every year. Changes that range from an increased focus on our mental health to simply getting up a bit earlier to drive through the ice and snow, and it all comes from the winter. The simplicity of a quick “oh it’s windy out tonight” just makes it all a bit easier, because everyone does it together in their own way.

sidedoorwoat

 

There’s something about people from Saskatchewan: you can find us everywhere. There’s something special about where we live that sticks with us, and if you look you can find it wherever you go. I think its the winter, it leaves it marks. In the darkest, longest, and coldest nights we all are forced to find what’s important to us. The winters here are a test, but not the kind that you pass or fail; the winter here is more like an aptitude test. The snow tells you what you have, what you want, and what you need.

 

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After the long wait is over you start to wake up a little later. You take that cool outfit out from the back of your closet because it’s finally warm enough to wear it again. The sun starts to come up earlier and it fills you with a resolve. The winter reveals and the summer gives you an opportunity to act. The world around us starts to get louder, the air filled with the collective silent shouts of determination.  

 

potholewithcigs

also the roads suck

Happy Birthday!

Last year, on August 25th, it was my 20th birthday. My favourite band at the time, Turnover, released an album on that very day called Good Nature. I woke up that day and listened to it while I typed up a FB post thanking everyone for their birthday wishes. That day, I hated my life. My girlfriend of 3 years had broken up with me a few days prior, I was finishing up a move to a new house, and I woke up close to noon and felt like shit. I had a small party organized at my friend John’s dad’s place but I had to DD so I couldn’t even drink that much. I dreaded the entire day, and at that time in my life I dreaded most days. I failed 2 classes in the past year of school, a school year during which I was in a toxic relationship and spent all my free time playing Smash Bros. because it was a nice distraction from the life that seemed like it was falling apart around me.

I came downstairs that day and my mom said she wanted to tell me a story. She told me about how she wasn’t sure if she wanted to have me. When she got pregnant with me, she had only been dating my dad for a few months. She wasn’t a Canadian Citizen yet and she was scared to have me when her life wasn’t stable. My dad was in Prince Albert at the time visiting his parents, my mom was at her apartment in Calgary. He drove home overnight and when he got to my mom’s apartment he proposed to her. They got married and on Aug 25th 1997 my mom gave birth to me. On that very same day, my mom got her Canadian Citizenship. My birthday is a very special day in my family, not only because it shares a day with my mom’s citizenship, but also the very first day she spent in Canada. My mom always tells me she came to Canada so that I could have a good life. She came to Canada 3 years before I was born.

My mom ran away from a genocide so that I could have a good life. Yet I had just turned 20 and was finding ways to be down on a day that is so important to me and my mom. The entire party I had with everyone was such a bummer for because all I was thinking about was how bummed I was about my breakup, how much it sucked I couldn’t drink cause I was driving, and I had convinced myself that nobody at this party liked me. I went home dejected and sad. The thing is, (mostly) everyone at that party did like me, and I liked them a lot too.

I don’t listen to Turnover’s Good Nature anymore, and I’m not that same grumpy kid anymore. This is such a turbulent time in my life that I realized I needed to just let it happen, and that my angry flailing against the reality of my life was needless. I haven’t quite yet found my centre, but my life is full of people who will help me up until I do.

 

Pretentious Bullshit: Dream Pop

Dream Pop has a somewhat overwhelming presence in the indie music landscape of 2018. Groups like Beach House, Tennis and American Football influenced a wide array of groups to make their own twinkling dreamlike soundscapes. What I can’t help but feel is that this genre is stuck in a rut of wanting that midwest emo twinkle without bringing anything novel to the table. The sound is so dominant and the albums so numerous I find myself asking myself “Why am I listening to this instead of American Football LP1?”. What I mean by this is: what about this record is gunna stick with me. While not all dream pop is really even that stylistically similar to American Football, I think comparing dream pop to the classic emo album is apt. They both attempt to use airy vocals and a laid back sound to inspire a peaceful reflective mood. American Football did this so well with their 1999 full length and their 1998 ep that they are still easily relevant in music discussion today even though midwest emo is mostly underground at this point. 

The question then isn’t really about a direct comparison; really what I ask of any Dream Pop is for something thats gunna make me remember them. Sounding like the rest of the twinkle isn’t the way to accomplish that. I don’t however think that the genre is saturated and I want to highlight a few artists that I keep coming back to and why. 

Alvvays – Upbeat pop songwriting backed with amazing vocals, and enough of a twist in their chord progressions to keep it from being boring (the Cmaj7 chord at the end of “In Undertow” kills me listen for it) 

Frankie Cosmos- I don’t know how so many ideas are fit into such short tracks but they somehow manage it. They don’t dwell on one idea for too long and it makes listening to their albums really fun. 

Japanese Breakfast- Absolutely incredible songwriting and arrangement, each of Michelle Zauner’s songs sound so so so unique. The entirety of Soft Sounds From Another Planet is so memorable so much so that reading a track title alone is enough for me to immediately remember the melody and sound. 

A few others of note for me are Trace Mountains, Soccer Mommy, Diet Cig, Girlpool, and Adult Mom. 

The end goal of any art within a certain genre doesn’t have to be novelty. Dream Pop is generally an enjoyable genre to listen to, and the Pitchfork flavour of the month dream pop album for whenever you are reading this is probably a good album. When a genre becomes saturated with a certain sound, it makes sense to go with the flow and incorporate that style. Unfortunately, a lot of the artists now likely won’t be remember purely because of the amount of other indie dream pop sort of emo sad emotionally vulnerable stuff out there. Only the best of the best is gunna stand out 10 years from now, which sucks because theres a lot of really good music out there that won’t get the same recognition if the genre was smaller. American Football stuck out because it was the only thing that sounded like that at the time and it also had the benefit of being really well executed (Steve Lamos’ drumming oh my lord). Similar quality work in Dream Pop exists to be sure, but the extra push of unique songwriting or instrumentation is what the acts that stick around will have. 

 

Pretentious Bullshit: Trumans Water

It’s likely you don’t know this band unless you pay close attention to my spotify activity or are one of the people who has gone through my record collection and asked me about the weird 7″ with Japanese writing all over it. I found said 7″ for .50 cents and it spins at 33 which I thought was goofy. I went expecting nothing and after I listened to both sides I found a noise rock band I quickly fell in love with. 

Trumans Water doesn’t make music. Where noise groups like Deerhoof and Sonic Youth take elements of noise, improv, and dissonance to write songs, Trumans Water writes songs that are a fallacy. Anything relatable or interesting in their songwriting is a just an exaggerated representation of something much better. Music that is made out of pure naivety. The desire to make noise overpowers anything that resembles an interesting melody or a catchy chorus. 

What’s left in the rubble is a question in your mind: Did I just listen to good music? Trumans Water manages to play a brain wiring trick on their listeners. Avant-Garde / No-Wave music often is intentionally meant to alienate the listener and in the process aim to expand the idea of what music is meant to be. Trumans Water doesn’t intentionally alienate you, but their music isn’t inviting either. They lie somewhere right before the uncanny valley where something is keeping your brain invested in the melody or the tone but objectively speaking there are mistakes on the recording or the track is sloppy due to its clearly improvised nature. Just as much as I wanna turn off  Trumans Water my brain would hurt if I did like when someone stops singing a scale right before the octave note. There’s enough of a progression in the song that I wanna hear the rest of the song but I also cant stand something about their tone or the production or the vocals or whatever it may be. 

Trumans Water just kind of exists because they want to exist. They make songs because a few people with instruments were in the same place, and the songs they make technically qualify as songs but just barely. It’s some dudes from california’s creative outlet and it wasn’t meant to get big or be their career. Finding them, at least for me, was like finding an old sketch pad from when you were 12. There’s just random drawings that you felt like drawing at the time and there was no other purpose to them besides the fact you felt like drawing them. I don’t think Trumans Water was formed as an intentional artistic statement as their satirical spotify bio is indicative of; if they were they aren’t good at it. The beauty of Trumans Water is simply that some dudes made music and if you feel like it you can to. Pure human expression. 

If anything at all about what I said interests you I would recommend their album O Zeta Zunis. That being said, this band is kinda objectively bad. I think I just have a really specific interest in this specific band because they scratch a really weird itch for me. I have trouble saying I really even enjoy this band. More so than me liking their music or finding any inspiration in their songs, this band is sort of like musical thrill seeking for me. I just get a feeling when I listen to this band (and The Hospitals) that I like. As I said earlier, its like the wires in my brain are being crossed. I personally like it but I don’t think many people besides me, and John Peel apparently, enjoy it too much. I guess if you wanna taste of what I mean you could put a few tracks but even I get sick of it after about 20-30 mins and have to listen to actual songs again. 

Pretentious Bullshit: Car Seat Headrest

There isn’t a lot to say about Car Seat Headrest that Pitchfork or Madeline Singh hasn’t already said. Will Toledo writes very vulnerable music despite how pretentious and aloof he can be, and the emotionally charged energy of his music has caught me off guard on many occasions (aka i’ve cried to his songs). I’m not gonna talk about this bands sound or why they are good or why I like them (TL;DR They sound like Guided By Voices + classic rock, Will Toledo writes relatable sad bullshit, and I was sad). Instead, Car Seat Headrest acts as an interesting case study for the classic “Well I like their older stuff more but the new stuff is still good!” that any fan of a band will run into, specifically with Will Toledo’s decision to remake the album that launched him into indie stardom: Twin Fantasy. 

Tracking the progression of any bands ability to make good music is a hard thing to pin down. Bands that have very solid early releases can have their reputation crushed by a record with a new sound that isn’t received well. It’s really a tightrope walk; artists want to grow and experiment while also needing keeping some of what hooked their fans in the first place. It also becomes harder to write fast punk songs about love, lust, and friendship when you are 32 and instead you might be much more musically interested in lunar conspiracy theories. While I love making fun of Alex Turner, the question really is Alex Turner owe Arctic Monkeys fans anything? Is he required to just keep releasing albums of the same genre for the rest of his musical career? How much leeway should fans give an artist as far as experimentation goes?  Would Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino have been better received if it was released as an Alex Turner record? I would really like an answer to these questions but I think it really comes on a case by case basis. I think I would have minded the sound change for Arctic Monkeys a lot less if Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino was a better record, especially considering AM was pretty different for the band and it wasn’t nearly as poorly received due to its quality. 

Car Seat Headrest, conveniently, answered these questions. Will Toledo’s songwriting was heavily impacted by the introduction of additional band members and recently the complete absorption of an entire other band. 5 years ago one would expect a Car Seat Headrest album to entail lo-fi indie rock, but 2016’s Teens of Denial is emotionally tinged hard rock and 2018’s Twin Fantasy (Face to Face) re-writes some of the lo-fi classics from Twin Fantasy as dance infused rock. Even more extreme are the new live arrangements of Twin Fantasy‘s tracks which are straight up disco / dance songs (no hate from me they rip). Will Toledo used the emotionally rawness in the songs he wrote in his formative years and made something that appealed to him musically, much to the disdain of fans who had 7 years to form an emotional connection to the original Twin Fantasy.  In spite of outspoken fans of the original, Twin Fantasy (Face to Face) likely introduced a lot of people to both Car Seat Headrest and to Twin Fantasy which wasn’t widely available. 

People form strong connections to music that they relate to, and to the time in their life at which that music was important to them. This intimacy fades over time as both the artists and their fans change, and works newer or older than the songs you adore seems incomplete. As much as music journalism can attempt to categorize music into the good and the bad, nothing can account for a certain song hitting a chord with a specific person. Both editions of Twin Fantasy can appeal to different groups. Holding artists accountable for always releasing music that appeals to everyone starts to seem a lot less fair when Car Seat Headrest can release the same album twice and still manage to get flak from hiehards. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pretentious Bullshit: King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard

I’ve always struggled to explain to people what is good about australian garage rockers King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard. I spent the entirety of my high-school years listening to nothing but 70’s psych rock and when a friend of mine introduced me to King Gizz I was instantly sold. There was something about their sound that really appealed to both my newly attained indie-sadboi tastes and my old love of long drawn out songs with unique instrumentation. The more I talk with people about this band, the more I realize that I might be almost completely alone in this. King Gizz lacks a sort of mainstream appeal outside of a few tracks, but they have a wide enough discography that a large variety of tastes can be accounted for. This lands a lot of first time listeners in a weird situation of not listening to the album they may enjoy the most and painting their entire discography in that sound. 

It may seem like the band is stretching themselves to thin by mixing it up to frequently; not sticking to a certain sound has landed lots of other bands with horribly received albums. King Gizz manages (somehow) to keep one foot planted hard in 70’s psych rock allowing them to explore other sounds. Flying Microtonal Banana makes heavy use of microtonality and interesting instrument choices, while Paper Mache Dream Balloon uses an acoustic only approach for a very flowery sounding album. The slew of albums they have released in the past 6 years in addition to their variety allows anyone with a love of psych rock and most other genres to find something they like in this band, but the size of their discog is intimidating. Someone who likes mellowed out indie but doesnt like metal would be as interested in Sketches of Brunswick East as they would be turned off of the band by Murder of the Universe. Getting into King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard almost requires a friend who both knows your music taste and the bands discography well. 

That being said, sometimes I have rose coloured glasses when it comes to this band. They scratch such a specific itch for me that I just adore this band so much. When I take a step back from the adoration, there’s noticeable reasons they aren’t able to achieve a more wide appeal. The band is a 7 piece with 3 Guitarists, 1 Bassist, 2 drummers, and a harmonica / keys player. The size of the outfit, while being part of the diversity of their sound, also keeps their sound fairly predictable. Gizz songs have a lot of shared motifs, even across albums, and their sound has a few staples which can be found across their albums (except for Paper Mache Dream Balloon and maybe Quarters!). The lead guitar lines usually are doubling the vocals, verses will end with fast pick slides / feedback loaded with delay and reverb, bass lines are usually in a bluesey steady groove, and most songs breakdown with a harmonica solo. While I love the sound of all of these, these trends and a few other prevail throughout their music and not enjoying them would essentially prevent one from enjoying any of their music. This really is the trap that most jam bands fall into, and its easy to spot just from the fans alone. 

People who like King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard usually really like King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard. Despite the bands own admission that the lyrics are mostly sci-fi sounding nonsense, fans on various platforms have poured into the bands lyrical content and constructed a lore for their albums called “The Gizzverse”. It’s pretty thin stuff, but its very indicative of what kind of fan base they appeal to. It’s the new age version of people who like The Grateful Dead, and I guess all i’ve realized is im one of those people. I really just love this band, and if I get the opportunity to I will talk about them for half an hour or more and bore the fuck out of my friends. I’ve achieved the indie kid version of not shutting up about Pink Floyd, which is fitting because in high school I didn’t shut up about Pink Floyd. 

If you want to get into this band, find someone that knows them to get a good recommendation on a starting point; my personal recommendation for an accessible entry point is Gumboot Soup. If you don’t want to do that and have patience, give a few different albums a try. Try to keep an open ear and don’t let the first album you try dissuade you from finding another album of theirs you might dig. If you listened to nothing but your 60 year old dad’s record collection growing up this band won’t be anything new. 

 

 

Pretentious Bullshit: Parquet Courts

I figure i’ll just keep making my way down the list of artists that I don’t shut up about in any social setting so up next is what might be my favourite band of all time.

Parquet Courts are a Brooklyn / Texas based post-punk group, who went from playing DIY basement punk shows in 2011 to playing on Ellen while promoting their 2018 album Wide Awake!. Though the group easily fits in with any descriptor of post-punk, they manage a very unique sound by being one of the few post-punk acts that doesn’t sound like a Joy Division cover band. Short fast classic punk style tracks are just as common in their tracklists as 8 minute noise explorations, all of which is backed up by the groups effective songwriting, catchy bass lines, and memorable hooks. 

Despite their post-punk tendencies Parquet Courts are often very honest and curt about social issues. Across their discography they discuss the struggles of living in large cities (Human Performance), the effect mass media and technology is having on culture (Content Nausea), and on their newest album Wide Awake! the group rallies for social justice. Wide Awake!‘s tracklist covers topics ranging from the evils of capitalism to gun violence. Instead of bothering with complex metaphors to deal with these issues, frontman A. Savage’s lyrics are straight to the point. His songwriting often presents a sort of vignette which allows the listener to be place in the shoes of the situation. For example, the track “I Was Just Here” off of Human Performance puts the listener in the shoes of someone in a New York City apartment, and the end of the track ends with his repeated shouting of “I was just here!” when he finds out his favourite chinese food place isn’t there anymore. 

This style of songwriting seems to be tailored to the era of music in which we live. With easy access to any music one desires through streaming, both music fans and casual listeners often spend less time with a particular group or album. Instead of pouring over the contents of a specific songs because its the only CD you have in your car, you make new playlists almost weekly with new tracks. If any deep lyrical analysis is done, Genius provides most people with a quick and suitable analysis. A. Savage’s lyrics require no interpretation, and Parquet Courts sticks out for it when their songs end with “Fuck Tom Brady”. 

I fear if I write anymore it’ll be boring. I really want to write like 20 more paragraphs and try to explain why this band is good but really you just need to listen to them to get it. I’ve been following this band for coming up on 2 years now, and I really wish I found them earlier. I’ve watched their spotify monthly listeners number almost triple in the past year, and I hope it goes higher. Parquet Courts have an incredibly unique but accessible sound, and their albums are so catchy and fun to listen to. I put on Human Performance while writing this and I lost my train of thought so many times because god DAMN Sean Yeaton does nasty things with a bass guitar. I have no doubt this band will get bigger and better, and I’m super excited for their future. I never get bored of this band and you won’t either, check out either of their latest two records please Ty UwU.