An indie band who peaked in 2007 returns with a new album that’s effectively the same as it always was. What could possibly go wrong?
Tag: indie rock
In this Review Round-Up, the new DeathCollector album offers some great death metal, and Carsick bring some freshness to indie-rock. It’s just a shame that Throw The Fight’s hard rock and Keep This Up’s easycore can’t quite match up.
Far removed from his work in Fontaines D.C., Grian Chatten’s solo debut steps into lucid, free-roaming indie-rock that’s all his own.
In this Review Round-Up, some pretty great breakthroughs land across the board, in super-melodic punk from Militarie Gun, pitch-black hardcore from Burner, and intelligent indie-punk from Toodles & The Hectic Pity.
Adding to the ever-growing cache of weirdo indie-rock and post-punk is Geese’s new album, which might just be good enough to rise fairly close to the top.
In this Review Round-Up, there’s some pretty rough entries into indie-rock from Ultra Q and nu-metal from Sicksense, only pulled back somewhat by Riyah’s new pop-rock EP.
With a disappointing previous album now behind them, Dream Wife find themselves on one hell of an upswing here, with smart, savvy dance-punk and post-punk that finally touches on greatness.
In this Review Round-Up, the DIY scenes turn out a bumper crop with the new album from Heart Attack Man, and EPs from The Deadnotes and UgLi.
In this Review Round-Up, Hot Mulligan’s best yet and promising starts from Himalayas and happydaze all come after DevilDriver, whose new album does…basically nothing.
With a companion EP to his last full-length, Jamie Lenman undergoes a more varied assimilation into indie-rock and folk-rock, in what’s arguably better than its predecessor.