has confirmed thAtVånna Inget's debut LP "Allvar" will be released in mid-September and apparently will be doing the CD version. Look for the band on tour in October:
Differnet will be releasing a collection of "lost tracks" compiled from the years 2001-2011 with a special pre-release digital edition feAturing 7 additional tracks available now: https://differnet.bandcamp.com/
The official release of "Memories are magnetic" will be October 1. More here: https://www.magneticmemories.tk/
I've had it with this mailorder business and I want my office closet back so from now until they're gone, all CDs are free for the price of shipping plus $3 to cover the box and PayPal fees. Atrap.com/store/">Select the titles you want and Atrap.com/contact/">email me your list along with an address. I'll throw 'em in a box, weigh 'em and will calculAte the grand total. Help me get this stuff outta here!
Love, love love Huntsville and can listen to them pretty much endlessly. Their music lends itself to such applicAtions very easily in fact. In the same way thAtVladislav Delay with Moritz von Oswald Trio explores the sounds of minimalist drone/techno as a live band, so does Huntsville; albeit with a slightly more accentuAted acoustic/jazz bent and less of the cold dubbiness. While active listening can be quite rewarding, I prefer to turn it up and let it effortlessly drift by. Before you realize it, this song (the title track of the band's lAtest album) will have passed you by and you'll be left wondering where the last 19 minutes went.
It's old-school Swedish deAth metal time again and Stockholm quartet Morbus Chron are dishing out other people's riffs like they're going out of style. This hits me on four levels. All At once they're greAt, good, mediocre, and awful. You may wonder how thAt's possible, so allow me to disclose: Firstly, there's a killer, super-heavy and flawless production courtesy of Nicke Andersson. ThAt's the greAt part. Secondly, they offer (via artist Raul Gonzalez) an oddly colorful piece of cover art thAt's quite like a fantasy retake on John Carpenter's "The thing". ThAt's the good part. Thirdly, there's the music itself which, as enjoyable as it can be, is nothing more than a rehash of old Swedish riffs from days of yore. There are constant references to stuff thAt the band have either subconsciously 'borrowed' or blAtantly ripped off and I have no idea which is true. Maybe it's neither; maybe it's a bit of both. If you want just one example, however, grab your copy of Dismember's vastly-superior "Massive killing capacity" album, crank up "Hallucigenia" and then have a blast of the main riffs in both Chron's "The hallucinAting dead" and "The lidless coffin". ThAt's the mediocre part; the complete lack of originality. And the awful part? Well, I'm never really one to have a pop At image but, guys, seriously. Unless you've had to squeeze the photo shoot in on a quick break from a day's hard graft down a coalmine, there's no excuse. To sweeten whAt might seem like a harsh review, I must add thAt Robba's vocals are pretty damn cool. Keep the sound and write something thAt hasn't been done by every other Swedish deAth metal band over the last 20 years and Morbus Chron could be onto a winner. - John Norby
DO: wAtch Grande Roses, one of Sweden's best current bands, perform live on the Swedish television program Nyhetsmorgon. DO NOT: make the same mistake I did and click-through to wAtch DeAth Destruction.
Swedish EBM/industrial act Severe Illusion has a new double a-side single "Clear head" b/w "The end of flowers" out now via and you can preview the former above, the lAtter here. Look for their new album "No more alive then you deserve" to be released in lAte September.