

You feel like you have been transported, out of the darkness and into the light.ĩ3. Rutger Hoedemaekers: The Age Of Oddities (130701)Īn extraordinary album for the listener, one that takes you from the murky cavern of distorted, processed vocal at the beginning to Hoedemaekers’s sublime and poignant piano at the close. In short, it is the comeback from The Bevis Frond we would have hoped for.ĩ4. It’s a kitchen sink drama, but shot in psychedelic technicolour and left open-ended for joy.
#PEERLESS GUITARS REVIEW FULL#
We can only wait and imagine a third with a similar amount of inspiration, conviction and above all, stunning melodies.Ī literal ripping to pieces, a literal cutting of the throat, literally too old for any of this shit until, arrestingly distressed, compelling bleeding along the edge, exhaustion turns to existential rage.Ī full journey through a vision that blends reality and romance. That’s two out of two gems from The Brothers Steve for the listener to enjoy. While industrial-metal acts like Godflesh are certainly a big influence, Primitive Knot remains a law unto itself.ĭelilah Bon is the explosive new project from the mind of multi-instrumentalist, producer and prolific punk rock queen Lauren Tate, unleashing a whole new level of clever, sarcastic, empathetic and righteously angry lyrics and the living embodiment of the DIY attitude.įull of hidden depths and fine detail that repeated plays will no doubt reveal. Primitive Knot: A New Ontology Of Evil (Deathbed Tapes)Ī New Ontology Of Evil is a dark, twisted and thoroughly evil trip into the void. They are recreating a formula that has worked over the years and will no doubt garner a dedicated following.ĩ9. There are hints of The Fall, The Pop Group, post/art-punk angular guitars. Scratch the surface, peel away the layers and you’ll find something here to make you think there might be something more to come. Louder Than War’s Top 100 albums of the year. That said, there were a few albums that really stood out from the pack and our number one was, this year, never in doubt. As writers, we cover as many as we can and Louder Than War is a broad church, reflected in the individual choices of all contributors we polled for this rundown. It’s been an amazing 12 months with so many fantastic records released. That time once again rolls around and we put our collective heads together to put decide on our best albums of the year for 2021.
