Philadelphia

New Track: “Bailey” – Father Figure

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Last month, West Chester-based quartet Father Figure released their debut record Weird Love. The collection is littered with an exuberant, emotive blend of melodic power pop that will aid in shedding those rainy day blues away. "Bailey" glides in a gentle roll while discussing the desire to alter the dynamics of a relationship or abandon it all together. What starts as an inviting inside take quickly shifts toward an agitated ultimatum.

Philadelphia

New Boosegumps EP Available for Streaming & Download

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Heart Peach, the new EP from Boosegumps, is the type of brightly lit, melodic music that can temporarily lift the shades. An inherent, honest optimism radiates from the keyboard-driven, percussive-sequenced tracks, whose unassuming, swift nature sheds any barriers. It’s a much-needed glimmer of hope amid all this negativity. Boosegumps will be part of the Witch H(c)unt LP release show this evening at All Nite Diner that also includes Curtis Cooper and S.T.A.R.W.O.O.D.

Philadelphia

New Music Video: “CoastGhost2Coast” – Haunted Homes

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Wearing a creepy mask while strolling through the streets, the new video for Haunted Homes‘ "CoastGhost2Coast" leaves one in an uneasy state. Directed by Bob Sweeney, the song’s ominous vibe is captured with its dim, black & white aesthetic. Then, as if a spell had been cast, those dressed in ghostly apparel lurk into the night to see over their surroundings. You can catch the band in the flesh on Thursday, April 13 at Johnny Brenda’s with Sallie Ford and Molly Burch. (Photo by Bob Sweeney)

Philadelphia

New Track: “Tongues” – Slomo Sapiens

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Half of Slomo Sapiens‘ recent EP Fishtown Tapes, “Tongues,” sets out on a mysterious journey. Paced by the snap and thump backend, the trio ventures off into the night. Gradually, the murkiness comes to a head as the guitar weaves a shadowy path. Then, the band unites in a complementing instrumental thunderclap. Digging a significant groove, Slomo Sapiens push the tempo, unleashing a can of whoopass.

Philadelphia

New Ecstatic Vision Album Available for Streaming

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Raw Rock Fury, the new album from psych-rockers Ecstatic Vision, will be released via Relapse Records on April 7; however, the wait is over because the album is currently streaming over at Noisey. The band unleashes their unrelenting charge of backend rhythm, sorcerer-style, guttural vocals, projected from the mountaintop or down in the dungeon with blistering blasts of saxophone and stealthy floating flutes. The concoction pulls listeners into an intoxicating brand of heavy, one which soars toward the cosmos, simultaneously exorcising demons. Ecstatic Vision is scheduled to perform on Saturday, April 15 at the First Unitarian Church on a bill that also includes EyeHateGod, Rosetta, and Moros.

Philadelphia

New Music Video: “Parallel Nightmares” – Moor Mother

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Camae Ayewa, a.k.a. Moor Mother, takes to the woods in her latest lyric video for "Parallel Nightmares," with co-director Bob Sweeney. Found on 2016’s Fetish Bones (Don Giovanni Records), the track comingles with the shaky, blurry, black & white footage in ominous fashion that feels more frightening than a hike with the folks of Blair Witch Project or doctored video sightings of Slender Man. It’s a match made in your deepest, darkest fears. Moor Mother is set to kickoff her European tour tomorrow at the World Minimal Music Festival in Amsterdam. (Photo by Bob Sweeney)

Philadelphia

New Track: “Proud” – (Sandy) Alex G

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Henceforth, Alex Giannascoli will now be referred to as (Sandy) Alex G. With his new album, Rocket, slated for release on May 19 via Domino, “Proud” is its latest single to arrive. A relaxing weave of twinkling keys, strumming and tambourine develops the low-key, heart-warming, country-folk tune. It’s a sticky, slow-down-and-look-around ode, whose slow-motion style, lyric-depicting video complements it tone. You’ll find yourself humming that melody before too long. You can catch (Sandy) Alex G performing next in Philly on Saturday, July 8 at Union Transfer with Japanese Breakfast and Cende.

Philadelphia

Debut Empty Stable EP Available for Streaming & Download

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Led by Tom Contarino, Empty Stable‘ self-titled EP ties into a straightforward, earnest, musical thread. Coasting on an acoustic folk-country-blues plain, the songs take on a wise and weathered tone of experience. As the temperatures shift in a pleasant direction, listening to Empty Stable ushers the desire to branch outward and explore the possibilities. It’s bare in its minimalistic nature, but full of feeling.

Philadelphia

New Track: “SICKO” – Psychic Teens

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It feels like it’s been a minute since we’ve heard new material from Philly gothic post-punk power trio Psychic Teens. And the wait was well worth it! "SICKO," the band’s latest incendiary single, sets ablaze all in its path with bloodcurdling guitar slashes and unrelenting percussive bombardments. No one will be spared. It’s an unfiltered, revealing, dystopian depiction of our modern day society. "SICKO" can be found on the group’s forthcoming EP HEX, due out April 21 via Hex Records.

Philadelphia

The Deli Philly’s April Record of the Month: Dark Web – Dark Web

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Self-proclaimed "sewer punks" Dark Web’s debut self-titled EP (now available on cassette via Suicide Bong Tapes) is the perfect remedy for a politically apocalyptic landscape. Their latest slew of anthems is unabashedly aggro (but in a good way), rooted in anxiety, angst, and audaciously messy emotions like paranoia and fear. Thematically grim yet cathartic, Dark Web’s mosh-ready riffs and punk-as-fuck swagger make heartbreak, alien invasion, and atomic bombs palatable.
 
Starting off with the fast-paced, sci-fi escapism of “Alien Vacation,” Dark Web upcycle a narrative, horror-punk trope by coupling it with searing humor and growling guitar that turn a tentatively terrifying scenario into a catchy dramedy laced with subtle sci-fi B-flick meets surf vibes. “Party’s Over” is a brief but persistent post-rager plea that announces frankly to listeners – fictive stand-ins for party-goers – that “it’s time for you to cruise.” Like Semisonic’s “Closing Time,” but less coy, “Party’s Over” is a tenacious reminder that all things – even the sickest parties – are temporal and meant to end.
 
Perhaps the most provocative cut on the album, “Toxic America” sums up the current state of the Land of the Free via buzzing chords and hissing cymbals. An inarguably political commentary reminiscent of The Misfits’ “Bullet” and The Spits’ Kill the Kool, the urgency and perceptiveness of “Toxic America” isn’t just subversive; it’s radical. “No Hope” is indulgently gloomy in a satisfying way, a ready-made dirge for nihilists and pessimists alike. Despite its overtly melancholy message, Dark Web’s “Iron Man II,” delves into the tortured psyche of a plausibly jilted lover, whose lamentations highlight the limitations that technology can impose on intimacy and human closeness: “This is not the way that things were supposed to be/and now I am more a man than a machine.”
 
In “A-Bomb,” an even more cataclysmic form of technological doom is explored, tapping into one of post-modernity’s most primal fears: nuclear annihilation. Whether interpreted as an allusion-laden metaphor or pure camp, the track forces listeners to contemplate the fragility of their mortality or at least humanity’s capacity for destruction, a theme that oozes into the eerie onset of “Pig Blood,” the album’s closer. Part psych, part haunt, the band’s final song makes Charles Manson’s Lie sound like a lullaby.
Slightly sinister, morbid, and relentlessly rock ‘n’ roll, Dark Web’s grime-y ballads will ensnare you at an instant and worm their way into your heart. “Resistance is futile.” You’ve been warned. – Dianca London
   

Philadelphia

Weekend Warrior, March 31 – April 2

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Released last month via Epitaph, The Menzingers’ latest album, After The Party, finds the quartet in a reflective realm. Maintaining a melodic, polished sense of exuberance, the album stews on reminiscent tales of young adulthood, steadily driving ahead while peaking out from within those narratives to inject crowd-charging, catchy choruses. After numerous nights of travel, their destination is the inviting return home as they set up shop, intertwining Americana-punk sounds at The Fillmore, joined by Jeff Rosenstock, and Rozwell Kid.
 
Meanwhile, right down the road at Johnny Brenda’s, the engulfing fuzz-torching psych rock of Bardo Pond blazes an invigorating sonic trail to commemorate their new release, Under The Pines, available via Fire Records. They’ll be supported by Sparrow Steeple and Eric Arn so step out of the rain and soak in some replenishing sounds. – Michael Colavita
 

 
Other places to hit this weekend…
 
The Fillmore Philadelphia (1100 Canal St.) FRI The Menzingers

Johnny Brenda’s
 (1201 N. Frankford Ave.) FRI Bardo Pond (Record Release), Sparrow Steeple, SUN Upperfields
 
Boot & Saddle (1131 S. Broad St.) SAT Phantasm, The Tea Club, Something Like A Monument
 
Kung Fu Necktie (1250 N. Front St.) FRI Fame Lust, SUN Geo Metro, Ryan M Todd
 
PhilaMOCA (531 N. 12th St.) FRI Aphra
 
Bourbon & Branch (705 N. 2nd St.) FRI Full Bush, Grace Vonderkuhn, Sheena & Thee Nosebleeds
 
The Trocadero (1003 Arch St.) SAT Lupe Garu/Superstar Yay, Brucey Da Rapper,  Yog JP, Reek Ivan, Stizz Gambler, Elijah Royce, O Dollaz, Burn The General, City Rominiecki
 
The Foundry (1000 Frankford Ave.) FRI Dirty South Joe, Gianni Lee, Heaven in Stereo
 
World Café Live (3025 Walnut St.) FRI (Upstairs) Flannel, White Limo/(Downstairs) La Giara, The Water Jug: Musical Memoir/Book Presented by Minas Ensemble, SAT (Downstairs) Rockin’ Docs for Diabetes Cure: Sounds of Society, Runnin’ Late, RD Sting, Rightback, SUN (Upstairs) Nik Greeley & The Operators
 
The Fire (412 W. Girard Ave.) FRI Bern The Bastard, Ezekiel Crow, B. Temporary, Fallible Being, Guillotine Tongue, Malcolm Culleton , SUN Kevin Ripley,  Trash Boy, Blushed
 
MilkBoy Philly (1100 Chestnut St.) SAT Lightning Jones, Civil Holdup, SUN Police/Sting Tribute: Thorazine, Boy Wonder, Coco Sol, Lou Lanza, Monopop, The Quirktones
 
Ortlieb’s Lounge (847 N. 3rd St.) FRI Square Peg Round Hole, The Vernes, SAT Oolala, Grubby Little Hands, Ton-Taun, Red Queen Lilith, SUN Community Center, Dirty Purple, Burned Out, Still Glowing
 
Silk City (435 Spring Garden St.) FRI Ed Christof, SAT DJ Deejay
 
The Barbary (951 Frankford Ave.) FRI I Think Like Midnight, Conversations, The Deadeyes, SAT The Orange Drop, Satellite Hearts, Dot.gov
 
Fergie’s (1214 Sansom St.) SAT Hired Guns Blues Band, SUN Rusty Cadillac
 
Connie’s Ric Rac (1132 S. 9th St.) FRI Legion 76, Duffy’s Cut, SAT Dr. Beardfacé and the Spaceman, Sweet Eureka, Venice Sunlight, Molly Rhythm
 
Voltage Lounge (421 N. 7th St.) FRI Young Graves
 
The Grape Room (105 Grape St.) FRI Sixteen Jackies, Slomo Sapiens, Slophouse, The Primaries, Falang, SAT Spaghetti Vacation, Local Smokes, Stargazer Lily, Matt Gauss Band, Tony Ukes
 
Ardmore Music Hall (23 E. Lancaster Ave.) FRI West Philadelphia Orchestra, SAT AM Radio, SUN The Grizz Band, Vilebred
 
Everybody Hits (529 W. Girard Ave.) SAT Agent Moosehead, Mage Hand, Blümntl
 
Space 1026 (1026 Arch St.) FRI The Whips, Gavin Riley Smoke Machine
 
The Pharmacy (1300 S. 18th St.) FRI Downtrodder, Hells, Dunning Kruger, SAT Manic Pixi, Moonroof, Honeytiger, SUN Cllctyrslf, Here/Now