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Dance in the spectral shadows of GETNER’s Irish folk fable of moonshine madness, Poitín

After a killer debut single, which posited GETNER as one of the most promising Mancunian rock n roll acts since Oasis, the four-piece fully embraced their Irish roots with their intoxicating tour de force of a sophomore single, Poitín.

Following an intro that allows you to imagine joining Oscar Wilde in an opium-scented den of iniquity, folk rock rancour insidiously riles up as GETNER as the vocals seductively reverberate through the devilish fable which narrates a tale of an old man in Emerald Isle’s rocky hills brewing moonshine during the prohibition era, inhaling the fumes and succumbing to the eerie spectral manifestations of his inebriated with disillusion mind.

It’s a darkly debauched slice of arcane reverie which doesn’t stop short of portraying a mind-altered protagonist. Poitín ensnares you within the metaphysical atmosphere, enabling you to slip back in time and alter your own mind with the hallucinatory vapour which GETNER efficaciously sonically visualised.

After hearing Poitín, Devil Went Down to Georgia is never going to hit the same ever again.

Poitín was officially released on May 31; stream the single on Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

$chaff the Prophet – TELEPHONE: The Cosmic Psych-Trap Track You Won’t Be Able to Put Down

$chaff the Prophet burst through the bubblegum pop trend and established his own cosmic bubblegum psych trap niche with his second LP for 2024, PSYCHEDELIC BUBBLEGUM.

The standout single, TELEPHONE, is an electrifying synth-driven kaleidoscopic synthesis of 8Bit, trap, hyperpop, and Owl City-esque electronica. If the viscerally hued sonics of the track don’t ensnare you, $chaff the Prophet’s sticky-sweet approach to painting a neon-lit vignette of a lonely protagonist searching for connection while keeping social life in the palm of her hand hits hard enough to bruise.

The exposition of how easy it is to get “lost in information, pixels and tones” couldn’t hit closer to home now given the hyperconnected nature of Gen Z and Gen Alpha. The artist’s signature arpeggios lend themselves effortlessly well to the playful yet empathy-evoking production, which shows just how far $chaff the Prophet has come since the launch of his debut in 2019. Now 11 LPs deep, his authentic sound has become so cultivated that he deserves to be revered as a pioneer in his own right.

TELEPHONE is now available to stream on Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Striking the Match: IST IST on the Spark Behind Their Latest Single ‘Repercussions,’ Their Fourth LP, and Navigating Post-Brexit Tours

IST IST has always been more than just a name in the post-punk scene; they’re a force of raw authenticity and innovation; as they prepare to release their fourth LP, Light a Bigger Fire, and embark on their UK and European tour, the band is set to amplify their distinctive sound with their upcoming single, Repercussions.

In this exclusive interview, IST IST delves into the evolution of their music, the challenges of touring in a post-Brexit world, and the relentless DIY spirit that fuels their growing fandom. Join us as we explore how they balance their post-punk roots with electrifying originality, and get a glimpse into the creative process behind their most ambitious record yet.

IST IST, thanks for the opportunity to sit down with you as you gear up for the release of your fourth LP, Light a Bigger Fire, and your UK and European tour later this year. The title of your upcoming album insinuates a formidable statement of intent after you have already set the post-punk scene alight.  Does your single, Repercussions, which will drop on June 14 set the tone for the rest of the LP? 

It gives you a bit of everything from the album really. There are the big synth lines, guitar breaks, drums doing big fills and the vocal hooks are probably quite catchy. We road-tested it on the recent tour dates and it landed really well which doesn’t always happen with new songs that fans are unfamiliar but it was cool to see the way the audience reacted to it.

How do you balance evolving your sound while staying true to the core elements that define IST IST?

The core elements which define IST IST are the four of us so for as long as we’re making music together there’ll always be familiarity. Adam’s voice is always going to make us sound like us. We all have a way of playing and whilst that might evolve, it’s still our way of doing things.

With every record we try to reach for new things and set ourselves new challenges. This time our goal was to make a record with no stone left unturned. On our previous three records, we recorded them in something like 10 days because we were all working full-time and whilst we were never unhappy with the end results, after living with them for a while we realised there were some undercooked bits and we might have left a bit on the table. This time we spent months in pre-production, tracking, overdubbing and mixing.

We’ve ended up with a record that sounds like us, but we’ve had the time and resources to fully use the studio as a tool, to make our best set of songs sound as rich and exciting as they possibly can.

What was it like working with producer Joe Cross?

It was our first time working with a producer. In the past, we’ve always just gone in, set up and played the songs how we’d been playing them in the rehearsal room. This time we recorded the demos and gave them to Joe, he picked them apart with us and changed some arrangements and structures, added parts and created a different palette of sounds that we wouldn’t have immediately thought of.

That was the key this time; to have someone with fresh ears come in and bring things out of us that we didn’t even know were there. There were moments that moved us out of our comfort zone but that’s surely what you aspire to do as an artist. Joe has got kudos so whilst we might have been pushed into areas we wouldn’t have been before, that’s the reason we did this album with him, because we wanted that.

You’ve notably moved out of the shadows cast by the post-punk pioneers and stepped into your own light; would you say that your electrifying sense of originality came easily to you?

It’s always been a double-edged sword having the comparisons thrown at you. When someone says we sound like this band or that band, very rarely do they mean it a negative way so you take the compliment. Especially if it’s a band like Joy Division or New Order which have clearly inspired us. But there’s a difference between ‘influenced’ and ‘sounds like’. Over the years we’ve experimented with lots of different styles, and that’s kind of come from trying to outgrow those comparisons and just become your own thing. As time’s gone on we don’t really think about who we sound like, but what we sound like and whether we like it. If you’re excited by it and it comes across in the music and on stage, then that’s surely going to excite your audience too.

There has been a lot of conversation around the difficulties independent artists face while touring, especially through Europe post-Brexit, what have been the most challenging aspects for you and what makes it worth it for you?

We only properly started touring Europe in 2022 so we’ve never known any different. Before post-Brexit regulations came into force we’d just played one-off shows in Berlin and Porto. Since we formally left the EU, artists, crew and equipment are treated as freight and everything you carry with you is subject to declarations and documentation which cost a lot of money to get. We’re just trying to go and play some shows, we’re not freight or haulage.

The flip side is that we’re at the point where the Netherlands is overtaking the ticket sales and streams in the UK so the fees we get from the big shows there prop up the rest of the tour. On top of everything though it’s just a really fun experience, to travel so far from home and there be big crowds of people who care enough about your music to turn up makes everything worth it.

To what extent do you attribute your DIY work ethic to your success?

The DIY thing is really what defines us, if not outwardly to fans it defines us to us, if that makes sense? It’s forced us to be patient but also persistent. It also means that we can make decisions quickly, even just being able to decide the design of record sleeves and make calls on music videos is a blessing. But we also don’t owe anyone anything. We haven’t got a label sending us the latest statement like student loan companies do, where you’re being told you’re still £50,000 unrecouped.

Maybe if things had been different and we’d been picked up by a label then we might have arrived at this point much quicker, but maybe having that pressure would have been problematic. Then again being under your own pressure to sell records, tickets and merchandise so you can afford to pay yourself is probably greater than any squeeze a label could put on you and we’re dealing with that pretty well right now. The reality is that we never really had an offer from any indie or major to consider though, so the DIY approach was a necessity. Our last album ‘Protagonists’ went to number 41 in the charts and it was funded and released entirely by us. Would it be nice if more people saw it for the genuine indie success it was? Yes. Does that really bother us and would we really change anything though? No.

Stream Repercussions on all major platforms, including Spotify, from June 14.

Visit the official IST IST website to purchase tickets from the upcoming UK & European tour and pre-order the Light a Bigger Fire LP, which is due for release on September 20.

Interview by Amelia Vandergast

The Primary Phase Principle has unveiled their cerebral post-industrial fable, The Subdued Mechanist

Taken from the debut EP, Echoes of the Mechatronic Age, the standout post-industrial electronica score, The Subdued Mechanist, from the Winnipeg-hailing solo artist, The Primary Phase Principle, paradoxically pacifies the senses while heightening emotions to such a visceral extent, it is almost primal.

The concept EP implants listeners in a fictional civilisation which depends on a universal mechanism they can no longer fully understand to deliver the ultimate parable of the AI-dominated future we are sleepwalking into.

The atmospherically filmic ambience of The Subdued Mechanist cerebrally alludes to Orson Welles’ belief that there is no confidence equal to sheer ignorance; it’s a liberating, quasi-Stoic score that holds a mirror to humanity and its willingness to evolve beyond its own comprehension.

By pouring influence of NIN, How to Destroy Angels and Tangerine Dream through a science fiction lens, The Primary Phase Principle unlocked the narrative power of post-industrial. He has a superlative gift in his ability to chronicle immersive fables simply through juxtapositions of harsh mechanical synthetics and crystalline flashes of enlightenment. His EP is so much more than just another addition to the airwaves, it’s a beacon of higher consciousness.

Stream The Subdued Mechanist on Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Jeffrey A. Meyer became the superlative savant of soul with his reggae-rock hit, L.O.V.E., featuring G. Love & Special Sauce

By merging talents with G. Love & Special Sauce, best known for his single, Rainbow, created in collaboration with the soulful one and only, Jack Johnson, the accomplished fusionist, Jeffrey A. Meyer, orchestrated the ultimate source of sonic serotonin with his funk-spliced, pop-hooked and reggae-wrapped roots rock hit, L.O.V.E.

The vibe-heavy sun-bleached hit keeps you ensnared with every chameleonic shift as Jeffrey A. Meyer exhibits his dynamic vocal talent and delivers everything from funked-up soul to evidence of his command over rhythm in the revved-up with rapture rap verses.

The North Dakota-born, Cali-based artist’s creative ambition with L.O.V.E paid off in spades; you can’t help but catch the self-love fever and forge a spiritual connection to the euphonically rugged in all the right places single that proves you’re never outside of love if you project adulation inwards.

Between the wind in the harmonica blows, the staccato rhythms pulsing through vintage tubes and the delicious grooves, L.O.V.E is as authentic as euphoric earworms come; each instrumental vividly paints the radiance of the track’s emotional underpinnings.

With more fresh, feel-good, funky jams ready to drop through Jeffrey A. Meyer’s sophomore album in 2024, there has never been a better time to affix the orchestrator of tonal transcendence to your radar.

L.O.V.E. was officially released on May 24; stream the single on Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

The Breathing Method let their post-grunge ‘Demons’ out to play in their latest soul-tearing triumph

With a sound Sub Pop should be rushing to sign, The Breathing Method retained their position as Scotland’s premier post-grunge outfit by unleashing their latest single, ‘Demons’. If you can bear the weight of the heavy emotional artillery and not be affected, your soul may be beyond salvation.

The steady and warm-with-affection guitar chords heighten the sting of the raw vocal stretches as they plunge into the abyss of despair and cut just as deep as Pearl Jam’s ‘Black’. But don’t get it twisted, Demons is so much more than your average trip back to the 90s Seattle sound.

The scrambled mental disquietness of the overlaying voice recordings in the track’s Blue October-esque middle eight extrapolates the agony of a chaotically disorientated mind, exhibiting how our demons can make battlegrounds of our psyche after objects of idiosyncratic desire move far beyond the eye’s periphery.

The way The Breathing Method executed Demons, ensuring they match the emotive delivery of Death Cab for Cutie, is a surefire sign that they’re a band worth watching as they tear through the underground and move into the mainstream.

Demons is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Zack Kirkorian Held No Prisoners in His Riff-in-Cheek Rhythmic Revolt Against Self-Obsessed Drama in ‘Tell Somebody’

One of the fieriest renegades in alt-rock, Zack Kirkorian, has ignited the airwaves once again with his latest single, Tell Somebody. The riff-in-cheek riptide of amplified contempt holds no prisoners as it launches a scathing attack on the kind of people who plague lives through their incessant self-obsession that is paraded as self-pity. We all know them, now we all have the perfect ammunition to launch at them or simply find catharsis in.

The exhilarant tour de force captures Zack Kirkorian at his most uninhibited as he rolls with the rhythmic punches in the same vein as the New York Dolls and proto-punk pioneers. You can’t help getting caught up in the frenetic fever of classic rock being filtered through a Zappa-esque lens.

There are few artists who can truly emulate the verve of the Sunset Strip. After blazing down it and touring in iconic bands, Zack Kirkorian is one of the rare rebels who can revive the golden era of rock with swathes of infectious authenticity. Notably, he was placed on the official ballot for the Grammy Awards for a reason.

Tell Somebody was officially released on May 28; stream the single on all major streaming platforms via this link.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

heaven // alone summoned karma in their Deftones-meets-melodic-post-hardcore single, full circle

Perth’s premier heavy alt-rock outfit, heaven // alone, gave the enduring appeal of Deftones an edge of melodic post-hardcore with their latest single, full circle, which reached all major streaming platforms on May 31 alongside the immersively thematic official music video which speaks volumes of how far the upcoming outfit has moved up from the underground since the release of their debut single, canvas, in 2023.

After an overture of crunched guitar chords, the sludgy hooks sink in before an explosive crescendo of hard-rock rancour with white-hot guitars tearing through the ennui the production is laden in.

The cutting electronica installations towards the outro augment the evocative impact of the release mused by the cyclical torment of a relationship that tempts you into surrendering to mercurial desire which is always followed by the inevitability of being pushed away.

The vocals become a sense of gravity within the kaleidoscope of cultivated volition as they drift from tender melodies into the Alexisonfire-esque hell-hath-no-fury like a soul screaming for karma outpours of visceral rage.

Stream the official music video for full circle via YouTube.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

USUALLY MODEST became the biggest free-from-vanity rockstar in pop with ‘Toothpick’

USUALLY MODEST came in red-hot with his latest rock-licked hypersonic pop hit, Toothpick, which blurs genre boundaries through an explosion of high-energy hooks and a sense of unfettered exuberance that becomes infectious from the first progression.

Unravelling like an accelerated sonic lovechild of the Weeknd and the 1975, Toothpick speeds past contemporary trends, arriving safely in the confines of the future of pop, inviting listeners in by laying out a doormat woven by innovation

Just as his moniker would lead you to believe the up-and-coming Switzerland-born-and-raised artist with Ukrainian roots, his free-from-vanity sensibility shines through in Toothpick. The sticky-sweet emotional underpinnings are the cherry on the hyper-augmented sonic cake, which will undoubtedly allow the self-taught singer, songwriter and producer to rack up even more streams.

Since his humble beginnings on SoundCloud in 2017, USUALLY MODEST is well on his way to becoming a viral sensation. In the last three years, he’s racked up over 350,000 streams on Spotify along with 50,000 total views on YouTube. His standout single, Soul Searching, has also been in regular rotation on one of the biggest Swiss urban radio stations, yet, we’re sure that there are far bigger accolades waiting to fall on the revolutionary.

Stream the official music video for Toothpick when it premieres on June 7th via YouTube.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

AFTERDRIVE buried indie landfill under the immensity in their latest anthem, Gold Dust

AFTERDRIVE

The Ipswitch indie-rock breakthrough band, AFTERDRIVE, hit the wheel and blazed beyond contemporary trends with their latest single, leaving outfits in the vein of the 1975, M83, and The Neighbourhood in the ‘Gold Dust’ of their viscerally textured hit.

Ben Watts’ distinctive vocal inflections relentlessly hit raw nerves with the projections of vulnerability in the bitter-sweet release which embodies the band’s determination to bring small-town boredom blues to an international stage.

The instrumental evocative artillery shows little mercy; after showing melodic restraint within the verses, the choruses cascade into augmented alchemic chaos as the alt-indie-rock guitars construct walls of sounds to encase you within the brooding atmosphere of the intense narrative of affliction as the upbeat synths resonate as the last feign of hope in the outpour of ennui.

After their debut single, Stick Around, met critical acclaim and received regular airplay from BBC Introducing and more success was sealed with every subsequent release, we have no doubt that Gold Dust will seal the artist’s fate as one of the biggest names in the UK indie scene.

Gold Dust will be available to stream on all major platforms from June 7th. Discover ways to listen via the official AFTERDRIVE website.

Review by Amelia Vandergast