Posts Tagged ‘Fugazi’

28th February 2025

Christopher Nosnibor

It seems that the world is devolving, and that stupidity is not only rewarded, but aspired to. It’s been a decline we’ve been witnessing for some time now, and seems to have really become popular currency at an accelerating pace since the advent of ‘reality’ TV. Jade Goody’s career was founded on her complete lack of knowledge of anything, paired with her superabundant willingness to spout her ignorance to the world with pride. The fact she was also an obnoxious racist seems to have been forgiven with her dying young after something of a media rehabilitation. Then we had to endure the moronic pronouncements of Joey Essex, who apparently believed that a turtle’s beak was made of wood, and while some laughed at him and some laughed with him, people lapped up the hilarity of his idiocy and in less than a decade, we ended up in a place where being a fuckwit was cool, and, more significantly, bankable. Because that’s what it all boils down to, ultimately. If you’re wealthy and famous, or infamous, who cares why or how, an if you can get rich and famous simply for being a fuckwit, you’re made. The tide of anti-intellectualism has soared to attain a truly unprecedented peak in the last couple of months, with the drivelling orange imbecile deciding that the way to improve education in the USA – already low-ranking globally – is to shut down the Department of Education and withdraw funding for libraries and anything that may actually enrich and educate the lives of citizens.

And yet, for all this, sometimes, you need music that’s kinda dumb, straightforward, catchy, energetic. This was always the appeal of punk, I suppose. It was rousing, got people pumped up, provided a focus and an outlet for anger and frustration, articulating those feelings in simple and relatable terms. Enter gritty Australian quartet Citizen Rat, who combine dirty punk in the vein of Anti-Nowhere League with a dash of metal rowdy rap and cite The Bronx, Turnstile, and Fugazi as reference points. Australia seems to be particularly good for producing energetic punky grungy acts, from DZ Deathrays to Mannequin Death Squad, and you can add Citizen Rat to the list now.

They describe ‘Shut My Mouth’ as ‘a gut-punching anthem about losing yourself in the struggle to please others, battling self-doubt, and fighting to be heard’, and its power lies in its simplicity and directness. And it’s not an exercise in self-pity, either – more a case of self-realisation, self-loathing, and a desire to do better: ‘I’m a piece of shit / I can’t shut my mouth / seems my life is heading south’, the front rat rants.

Stylistically, it compresses a surprising array into its full-throttle three minutes, going from The Beastie Boys to Motorhead, and packing some heavy-duty riffery, too. Its appeal is twofold: first, there’s a compelling sense of humanity here, the torture of self-flagellation over misspeaks and simply talking bollocks because anxiety or beer or brain disconnect, and second, it’s got a monster chorus and some strong hooks. Yes, it’s brash, it’s dumb, but it’s ballsy and it’s entertaining. And that’s a win.

AA

Screenshot_20250120_190133_Adobe_Acrobat

Swansea Alternative band ‘Baby Schillaci’ today have shared a blistering new track ‘The Flatliners’ as a thank you to everyone who has supported the band as release date for highly anticipated furious debut album ‘The Soundtrack’ draws closer on the 2nd October 2024

This debut album promises to expand their sonic horizons while retaining the raw, confrontational edge that has become their hallmark.The albums raw and unflinching approach has alerted the attention of National Radio with KEXP, BBC 6 MUSIC, RTE2, BBC RADIO WALES and has provoked positive reviews with Backseat Mafia, God Is In The TV, Listen With Monger, Amplify The Noise, Fame Magazine, Niche Music, Aux Magazine, No Transmission and many many more…..

Hitting the scene in 2023, Baby Schillaci are swiftly carving out their position in the alternative Welsh music scene with their raw, unfiltered sound. Rooted in post-punk and noise, the band’s aggressive yet intricately layered compositions evoke comparisons to seminal acts like Mclusky, At the Drive-In, and Fugazi. Their music is a relentless assault on the senses that challenges and captivates in equal measure.

Baby Schillaci’s reputation has been forged from their ferocious live shows with echoes of Nirvana, Public image & the Manics mixed with their own unhinged, visceral style. The intensity and unpredictability of their shows have drawn a devoted following.

Known for their relentless energy and erratic performances, Baby Schillaci continue to push the boundaries of the craft with an LP that encapsulates their unfiltered essence.

Hear ‘The Flatliners’ here:

Baby Schillaci Main Press

After two decades of timeless records, Oklahoma City’s Traindodge continues their post-hardcore dynasty with the release of their eighth LP, The Alley Parade, due out on September 22, via Spartan Records.

Upon the release of the album’s second single ‘The New Low’, vocalist/guitarist Jason Smith says, “’The New Low’. It’s about seeing what you want to see in someone regardless of where it might lead you. Sometimes you find that you hold vastly different definitions of the same words you’re using with someone. Then gradually you realize you’ve been having conversations of pure insanity with them the entire time.”

Listen here:

AA

Traindodge_2023_-_Dylan_Johnson__giantclick-3

Photo Credit: Dylan Johnson

16th August 2019

Their first release in a couple of years finds bassist Lachlan Anderson return to the fold after eight years away. Recorded in just one afternoon, the EP exudes urgency and marks a return to earlier form. The guitars jolt and scratch, sharp treble explosions that crackle like fire. They’re choppy and cut across the rhythm section at blurred, oblique angles, fraying the edges as they side and scrape skewiff and frenetic. The rhythm section pins it all together tight, but it’s attacking, relentlessly kinetic and propulsive, driving, and simultaneously solid and agile.

‘These songs find the band much more raw and harsh than they have sounded in years. Maybe it’s something personal or maybe it’s because the world is on fire’, writes Nate Holdren in his enthusiastic text which accompanies the release. It’s true: New Zealand may not be the place most directly feeling the pain of Trump or Brexit or now Johnson, but it’s clear it’s no place to be. In fact, the bottom line is that there simply is no place to be right now, with rapidly accelerating climate change and, quite simply everything. We’re all doomed. But while we’re all screwed, at least we still have art and music.

‘Casualties of Decades’ slams in hard by way of an opener, machine gun drumming driving a stop/start riff attack that’s a blend of Shellac, Fugazi, and Trail of Dead. ‘What We Choose to Remember’ is also reminiscent of Shellac, the minimal lyrics half-spoken, half shouted, and half buried beneath angular guitar blasts and a throbbing bass that’s less of a groove than a hammer assault. It’s the bass that dominates ‘Everyone Else’ and hold the whole blustering, blistering racket together. ‘Break the Mirror’ rams it home in a blistering minute and 23 seconds, a full-tilt stuttering frenzy of (post)punk noise that goes hell for leather in a scream of feedback.

This is the sound of a band rejuvenated, reinvigorated, a band bursting with energy, passion, and fury. There’s no shortage of things to fuel fury in the world now, and I’m certainly not the only one with a vast thirst for music which channels that fury and frustration.

Die! Die! Die! on Facebook and Bandcamp.

AA

Die! Die! Die! – O EP