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Gouge Away - Deep Sage (2024)

"Deep Sage, Gouge Away’s third studio album, started coming together in 2019 during sound checks and in small pockets of downtime between tours. In early 2020, they demoed with Brok Mende in an unassuming storage unit in Orlando. They pulled influence not only from the nostalgia of the bands they grew up listening to but also developed the sense of urgency, noise, and introspective lyrics they felt most represented them. Those demos helped shape the songs into the finished record that Deep Sage would become."

One of my all time favorite albums is Kezia by Protest the Hero, specially the track "Blindfolds Aside". The chorus at the end, when the guard grows a concience and gets torn between his duty and morals, gets me every time. It's such a strong piece

song.link/se/i/122957501

Image for Blindfolds Aside by Protest the Hero
Songlink/OdesliBlindfolds Aside by Protest the HeroListen now on your favorite streaming service. Powered by Songlink/Odesli, an on-demand, customizable smart link service to help you share songs, albums, podcasts and more.

Chengdu-based alternative rockers Riot In School have recently released their second album, "//Punk Rock Blasphemy". This latest offering represents a confluence of ambition, ideals and passion, and is definitely worth supporting. The debut album was produced by Yang Haisong and released by Maybe Mars. This time, however, the band have decided to release it on their own label, Youthquake.
#ChinesePostpunk #Postpunk #PostHardcore #Grunge #Shoegaze
riotinschool.bandcamp.com/albu

Hello #MusiciansDay! We are Ascendency, an alternative metal/post-hardcore band from Germany, founded in 2009.

SUNDOWN
🎧 song.link/Ascendency-SUNDOWN

Doom Crows
🎧 song.link/Ascendency-Doom-Crow

Still Alive
🎧 song.link/Ascendency-Still-Ali

You can find us on most social media platforms and music apps, including Bandcamp. 🤘 For more info and whereabouts, check out our website: ascendency.band

TAR
Toast
1993 UK & U.S. pressing

A little Sunday mid-day noise.

When I started exploring the Touch And Go label as a kid, Tar were one of the first bands (along with The Jesus Lizard) that I really dug, particularly THIS record.
Sure, Seattle was all fine & good & got all the attention in the #90s , but Chicago gave us an equal amount of awesome shit.
AWESOME record from my youth.
#vinyl #vinylrecords #vinylcollection #1990s #90smusic #art #music #vintage #postrock #posthardcore #Chicago

"Many of the tracks were written late at night and into the early hours—a process which inspired the title—and over time became a depiction of an alternative reality that was unfolding."

Says CARTHAGE about his new album. Find out everything about "Duskdawn" now!

soundsvegan.com/2025/03/cartha

soundsvegan.com · Carthage – "Duskdawn" | Sounds VeganCartage – Duskdawn – Find out everything you need to know about the brand-new shoegaze meets noise sound masterpiece!

K L P S – K L P S Review

By Maddog

Determined to explode my word count while safeguarding my character count, K L P S is a familiar band with an unfamiliar name. The band’s 2023 debut Phantom Centre, released under the name Kollaps\e, got stuck in our filter before I yanked it out. Phantom Centre’s sludgy mix of atmosphere and eighteen-wheeler riffs made it concise and compelling, albeit one-track. Two years on, K L P S sees Sweden’s sludgers drop a backslash and four letters while adding even chunkier riffs, more atmosphere, and three non-breaking spaces.1 After an already-promising start, K L P S has taken one leap closer to being a titan of their genre.

K L P S takes Phantom Centre’s measurements and doubles each one. The riffs are bigger, with distorted rhythmic explosions that recall LLNN. Conversely, even these heavier sections come drenched in post-hardcore sorrow. Adding to the soup, K L P S’ use of chunky riffwork to build meditative atmospheres resembles stoner sludge acts like Dvne. While K L P S has amped up their extremity, K L P S’ softer pieces step up as well. The album’s sparser passages, often featuring just simple guitar melodies and ritualistic drum beats, add stark contrast to its heavyweights. Although K L P S is less rhythmic and bass-focused than Phantom Centre, it magnifies nearly every other dimension of its predecessor. The resulting record bears the familiar markers of sludge, but accentuates them all to avoid fading into irrelevance.

K L P S’ blend of heft and emotion makes every track a highlight. The album’s hulking riffs harness sludge’s power while eschewing its typical laziness, tethering themselves to ominous, infectious melodies (“Undertow”). Aided by blackened motifs, even these heavy segments ooze pathos (“Subverse”). K L P S’ descents into minimalism stand in stark musical contrast but embody the same strengths, using subtle melodic tweaks to both hypnotize and grip the listener (“Katarsis”). The record’s greatest triumph is that it never treats these diverse elements as mutually exclusive. The sections that blur the line between heart and muscle show off the best that K L P S has to offer, like the interplay of meditative guitars, post-rock ambience, and climactic riffcraft on “Tribulation.” Like Amenra before them, K L P S wields beauty and brawn in ways that are at once worlds apart and inextricable.

Although K L P S remains interesting throughout, its tracks bleed together over several listens. The album’s six songs have similar lengths and lean into similar styles, without a clear sense of evolution or climax in the tracklist. While each song navigates deftly between serene minimalism and sludgy cacophony, this style grows stale by the end. K L P S’ production choices magnify this feeling; although each instrumental line shines through, the loud master and the muddled sludge riffs make K L P S seem more repetitive than it really is. Still, these are faint splotches on an otherwise impressive record. Given its tempered 43-minute runtime, K L P S never threatens to lose my interest altogether. And when the album does prioritize buildup and climax, the results are spectacular. The closer “Aureola” takes the cake, using powerful melodies to anchor the listener before building up into oblivion and then back down into cathartic quiet. K L P S would benefit from more of this continuity overall.

K L P S has improved upon their debut on nearly every axis. While Phantom Centre was already a breath of fresh air in a moldy genre, K L P S steps up its riffs, its ambience, and its emotional weight. Displaying an uncanny level of maturity, K L P S’ sophomore release shines by blending these elements into a heady brand of sludge where the riffs have soul and the atmosphere has grit. While I wish K L P S had more ebb and flow as an album, its masterful songs keep me coming back for more. Even skeptics of sludge and post-metal owe this hidden gem a listen.

Rating: Very Good!
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: These Hands Melt
Websites: kollapsemusic.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/kollapsemusik
Releases Worldwide: March 7th, 2025

#2025 #35 #Amenra #Dvne #KLPS #Kollapse #LLNN #Mar25 #PostHardcore #PostMetal #Review #Reviews #Sludge #SwedishMetal #TheseHandsMelt