New Reviews
Tindersticks - Distractions
Tindersticks return with the dark and moody Distractions, opening with the pulsing late-night groove of "Man Alone (Can't Stop The Fadin')."…
The Hold Steady - Open Door Policy
Ten albums in, The Hold Steady aren't reinventing their finely tuned wheel on Open Door Policy …
New Releases
Melvins - Working With God
Following up on 2013’s “Tres Cabrones“, this outing once again features the band’s 1983 lineup of Buzz Osborne, Dale Crover, and Mike Dillard.
💿 Amazon | 🎧 Apple Music
NOFX - Single Album
14th full-length studio album for the veteran pop/punk band.
💿 Amazon • Bandcamp | 🎧 Apple Music • Spotify |📺 Youtube
Down By Law - Lonely Town
The tenth album by the Dave Smalley led veteran punk band.
💿 Amazon | 🎧 Apple Music |📺 Youtube
Mouse On Mars - AAI
Thirteenth studio album from the veteran electronic duo.
💿 Bandcamp | 🎧 Apple Music • Spotify
Cabaret Voltaire - Shadow Of Funk EP
Three-song EP follow-up to 2020's Shadow of Fear.
💿 Amazon • Bandcamp | 🎧 Apple Music • Spotify
New 90s Podcast
The Gerogerigege - Tokyo Anal Dynamite
What is Tokyo Anal Dynamite by The Gerogerigegege? Our ears are still ringing, trying to figure it out. Punk? Noise? Nothing? Everything?
Count to four. Do it seventy-five times, only interrupted by blistering feedback, screaming, and manic drums. And do it in about thirty-one minutes. That is Tokyo Anal Dynamite by The Gerogerigegege. In the world of experimental and avante-garde, noise has been tackled by artists as big as Neil Young and Lou Reed. Sonic Youth made a career out of crafting feedback into a symphony of melody. But if punk is about stripping rock 'n roll down to components and putting in the hands of the most rudimentary players, Tokyo Anal Dynamite might be the most punk rock album ever made. Special guests - Josh 'FunkDOC' Ballard, DMO UNION
New 80s Episode
Scratch Acid - Berserker
While David Yow and David Wm. Sims are better known for their years in 90s post-hardcore noise rock band The Jesus Lizard, the pair got their start in Austin, Texas as Scratch Acid in the 1980s. Yow sounds like Yow, a madman howling and grunting through two and three-minute blistering broadsides. But unlike The Jesus Lizard, the band is slightly less singular and subtly shows off a variety of influences, from 70s psych and prog to Cramps-like psychobilly garage punk.
Search the 528 episode archive
The story of 90s rock one week at a time since 2011. Weekly episodes featuring 90s album reviews, interviews, and roundtable discussions. Made possible by the DMO Union.
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