Foundation Vinyl Newsletter

Welcome

Hello and welcome to the latest edition of the Foundation Vinyl newsletter!  We have a stacked line up this week with five cracking featured new arrivals to enjoy.

First up, we have three new albums on La Vida Es Un Mus – the searing return of Helsinki’s Yleiset Syyt with Saitte Mitä Halusitte, the darkly melancholic Canciones Malditas from Barcelona’s Suicidas, and the swaggering raw punk of Tokyo’s Raw Distractions with 奇しく燃える.

Then we hand over to Wrong Speed Records for their two freshest releases – the acerbically febrile fury of Tyne & Wear’s Irked on The Grievance, before the fevered agitations of Nottingham’s No Peeling with EP2.

As always, we have an updated London gig listing, which includes a just announced Cœur À L’Index show (31/05) and the line up for August’s United & Strong Festival.  Plus, we have  a quick look at some of the great new releases heading our way in coming weeks, including next week’s fine haul featuring Bono / Burattini, Demmers, D.S.B., and The Saddest Landscape.

Featured New Arrivals

Saitte Mitä Halusitte by Yleiset Syyt / The Grievance by Irked / 奇しく燃える by Raw Distractions / Canciones Malditas by Suicidas / EP2 by No Peeling (clockwise)

‘He tahtoisivat nöyryyttää, Ansiotonta köyhää, Ne eivät osaa edes hävetä, Kumaraan kääntya’ (Ansioton Köyhä) / ‘They long to humiliate, The undeserving poor, Who don’t know when to feel shame, Or when to bend down’ (The Undeserving Poor)

Hailing from Helsinki, and featuring members of Foreseen and Kohti Tuhoa, Yleiset Syyt (Common Reasons) are back with their second full-length, Saitte Mitä Halusitte (You Got What You Wanted), and their first new material since 2021’s 7-inch, Umpikujamekanismi (Dead End Mechanism).  They continue to forge a sound that draws on the traditions of early 1980s’ hardcore, both Finnish and US, to striking effect.  It speaks to that specific moment in time when a grittier ferocity was first introduced to punk, but before more avowedly metallic influences began to emerge later in the decade.

A frantically propulsive rhythm section underpins the clean yet raw riffage as it unfurls in a hook-laden fury and the solos flare fleetingly brimming with an almost classic rock bombast.  Meanwhile, the rasping barked vocals build connections between our complicity in the rise of authoritarianism, our failure to challenge their narratives that punch down on the already marginalised, and our silence in the face of escalating militarised violence.

The catchily frenetic onslaught is vividly embodied by the likes of the jaggedly pneumatic Aavekaupunki (Ghost Town) and the tensely seething title track.  Yet, arguably, the standout moments are when the band take their foot off the pedal just a touch and let their groove take over during the menacing stomp of Inhimillisen Tuho Piiri (The Circle Of Human Ruin) and the broodingly dramatic, post-punk tinged finale of Tuhat Kättä (A Thousand Hands).

‘No busques sombras detrás de mi, las llevo dentro. Vivo ciclos de luz y oscuridad, dolore n llamas, paz y tormento’ (Paz Y Tormento) / ‘Don’t look for shadows behind me, I carry them inside. I live in cycles of light and darkness, pain and flames, peace and torment’ (Peace And Torment)

Barcelona’s Suicidas initially released five EPs between 2012 and 2016, which were all brought together in last year’s discography, Éxitos Y Fracasos (Successes And Failures).  While they remained intermittently active on the live front, they also became involved in an array of other projects, including Irreal, Ruidosa Inmundicia, and Tàrrega 91′ among others. However, after a decade long recording hiatus, they are now back with their debut full-length, Canciones Malditas (Cursed Songs).

The trio continue to hone darkly melodic punk, nurturing a simmering tension that plays off a deep-seated sense of melancholy with their innately infectious melodicism.  Crisp percussion and a chunkily resonant bottom end anchor the taut, regret flecked riffage and brightly supple solos.  Meanwhile, the stridently energetic, deftly layered dual vocals summon the resilience and courage to overcome life’s betrayals and isolation.

Each track is a tightly coiled eruption.  Subtle shifts in texture see emotions swing for the tentative optimism of La Rosa Y El Puñal (The Rose And The Dagger) to the plaintive resignation of Llueve En Mi Corazón (It’s Raining In My Heart), and then from the rueful Senderos (Paths) to the raucous climax of Peligro Social (Social Danger).  It is a finely weighted seesaw between the desolation of loneliness and the quiet resolve of hope and friendship.

‘Amidst the lingering traces of the bustling crowd, The scent of embers lingers as I make my way home, Looking down, searching for the answer’ (雑踏 / Choking)

Tokyo’s Raw Distractions have been honing their UK82 inspired hardcore for over a decade, releasing four 7-inch EPs and a couple of demos.  Now, they step up to the challenge of their debut full-length, and it is one that they meet with a swaggering assurance.  奇しく燃える (Strangely Burning) is the statement of a band who have immersed themselves in their influences to the point where they now have the confidence to imbue them with their own thoroughly distinctive energy.

Front and centre are the band’s vibrantly skittering leads and ripping solos, which are unleashed with an unabashed zeal.  They are boldly melodic and lean into Burning Spirits territory but with a dash more rock’n’roll strut.  The scaffolding is provided by the surging UK82 riffage, with just a dash of NWOBHM gallop, and a fiercely unassuming rhythm section.  Meanwhile, the desperation shredded vocals, and the combatively catchy backing, tackle themes of social conformity and the dangers of rising political and religious extremism.

As they sweep from the rampaging title track to the soaring melodicism of No! Racist, and then from the jagged melancholy of 雑踏 to the thoroughly unexpected Gregorian chanting that is braided through Midnight, it is a raw, compellingly instinctual battery.

‘What is your five-year plan? Who is your mortgage advisory man? Please tell me more about the school catchment area in your new neighbourhood?’ (Settle Down)

To be irked feels like a most quintessentially English emotion.  To be repeatedly agitated by something, but to be too polite to say anything, until you finally erupt in what, to the unaware, may seem like a disproportionate display of anger.

Now, Tyne & Wear’s Irked are most definitely angry but, thankfully, far too impolite to keep it to themselves. So, we are treated to another whiplash tour of darkly acerbic observation and blackly wry humour on their aptly titled debut full-length, The Grievance.

All the hallmarks of the band’s self-titled debut EP are firmly in pace, though they pulse with a more febrile abrasiveness amid the catchy hooks and contemptuous fury.  The tautly clean guitars unfurl waves of riffage that jerk and jolt with a sinewy vigour that matches the propulsive garage punk energy of the rhythm section.

This provides the perfect primer for the utterly virtuoso vocals.  Sardonic drawls morph into urgent yelps and then into venomous tirades with a bristling yet seamless intensity as they cast their eye over themes of cultural gentrification, midlife malaise, and the workplace treadmill.

There are highlights aplenty to get stuck into.  The fiercely rhythmic exhortations of Who Asked?  The ominously roiling The ACP.  The spiralling indignation of Settle Down.  The gyrating venom of The Hardest Man In Billingham. The sax fuelled contortions of Freak Pub.  Each slams home with a bracing, invigorating slap.

No PeelingEP2

7 Inch

‘9 to 5 is all there is, they pocket all the paper clips, take a handful of the staples, spat out by the bad appraisal’ (Stationery)

Seven tracks, nine minutes, and an absolute shedful of ideas thrown together with a rare abandon can only mean one thing – the return of Nottingham’s No Peeling.  This is the follow-up to last year’s self-titled debut 7-inch, and the playfully hyperactive, impulsively off-kilter aesthetic remains utterly untamed.

The joust for supremacy between the scrappy guitar and jarring synths resembles two octopi trapped in an eternal arm wrestle from which neither can escape.  As a result, despite their relative brevity and the committed endeavours of the tightly spry rhythm section, each track relentlessly morphs and reassembles in chaotically unexpected directions.

In the wrong hands, matters could easily unravel and the fact that they never do speaks to the band’s shared intuition for the road less travelled.  The binding glue is, perhaps, the gently drawled, dryly sardonic vocals as they roam from the unwieldy brawling of furry sporting mascots to grabbing your fair share of office stationery to compensate, just a little, for the soul sapping clock watching.  My personal highlights are the darkly swelling Night Idea and the fractured convulsions of Stationery.

Shows And Tours

Bad Breeding and Klonns / Blondies Brewery / Saturday 9th May

Ayucaba and Dark Thoughts / New River Studios / Friday 29th May

May

9th   Bad Breeding, Klonns, Zenocide, The East Eights, Secrecy (Blondies Brewery)

9th   Higher Walls, Black Mould, Empty Threat (Blondies Bar)

13th   Artificial Go, No Peeling plus more (New River Studios / UK Tour)

15th  Alice Does Computer Music, Anrimeal, Lanny (The Shacklewell Arms)

15th-17th  Desertfest featuring Cavity, Deaf Club, Harrowed, Moloch and many more (Various Venues, Camden / Deaf Club UK Tour)

16th  Morrow, Copse, Jøtnarr, Gilded Cage (New Cross Inn)

20th  Prisão, Knome, Lost Cause, Catastrophe (New River Studios)

21st  Sarsour, Snake Easter, Ikhras, Mashaal, Rat’s Breath (New River Studios)

22nd  Angel Dust, Agency, Speedway, Scab (100 Club / Sold Out)

22nd  Guttersnipe, Sublux, Mammal Panic (New River Studios)

24th Tiikeri plus support (New River Studios / UK Tour)

28th  Screensaver plus support (The Shacklewell Arms / UK Tour)

28th  Nagasaki Sunrise plus support (tbc / UK Tour)

29th  AyucabaDark Thoughts, Skintern, Secrecy (New River Studios / UK Tour)

29th  Sex Germs, Ruined Virtue, Most Crevice, Crude Image, Gutter Carrion, MB93 (Old Blue Last)

29th  Algae Bloom, Cold Holding, incaseyouleave, I’m Sorry Emil, Closed Hands (New Cross Inn)

30th  Texas Is The Reason plus support (Islington Assembly Hall / UK Tour) Cœur À L’Index

31st  Cœur À L’Index, Grazia (The Waiting Room)

June

2nd  Merzbow with Cavalera and Bernocchi, Microcorps  (Iklectik / Sold Out)

2nd  Gorilla Biscuits, Knuckledust, Clobber, Aku (229)

3rd  Merzbow, Nina Garcia (Iklectik / Sold Out)

5th  Acid Reign plus support (The Underworld / UK Tour)

7th  Merzbow, Elvin Brandhi (Iklectik)

11th  Drain, Pest Control plus more (The Underworld / Sold Out)

13th  Laura Kreig, Sofia, Morreadoras (New River Studios / UK Tour)

13th  Soga, Gimic, Leashed, Gross Misconduct (New River Studios / UK Tour)

13th  Oi Polloi, Rank, Contract Killer, Wind Of Knives, Dinosaur Skull (New Cross Inn)

18th  Twenty One Children, Ursula, State Sanctioned Violence, Skunkai (New Cross Inn)

20th  Knuckledust, Stampin’ Ground, Grove Street, 50 Caliber, Born From Pain, Tempers Fray (The Underworld / Sold Out)

20th  Nuovo Testamento plus support (Oslo)

23rd  Agriculture, Healing Wound plus more (Bush Hall)

25th  Contention, Clique plus more (New Cross Inn)

July

3rd  Speedway, Feels Like Heaven plus more (The Blue Monk / UK Tour)

5th  Stress Positions plus support (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)

6th  Diploid, Filler plus more (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)

9th  Tethered, Brach, Every Face Becomes A Skull (Calamity Tank)

9th  Shai Hulud, Afraid To Die plus more (New Cross Inn)

10th-11th  Mongrel Fest featuring The Chisel, Imposter, Last Affront, Scab, The Social, T.S. Warspite plus many more (Venue tbc)

10th  Agnostic Front, D.R.I., Under The Influence (The Underworld)

16th  Ostraca, Cady, Jøtnarr, Carpenter (Piehouse Co-op)

23rd  Racetraitor, Hour Of Reprisal, Temple Guard, Afraid To Die (New Cross Inn)

26th  JK Flesh, Black Leather Jesus, Kleistwahr, Helm (Oslo)

August

7th– 8th  United & Strong featuring C4, Combust, Cro-Mags, Demonstration Of Power,  Despize, The Flex, Fury, Imposter, No Idols plus many more (Number 90 Lock)

September

19th  Spy, Spaced, Dry Socket (The Underworld / UK Tour)

October

17th  Avskum, Earth To Dust plus more (New Cross Inn)

November

19th  The Hope Conspiracy plus support (The Underworld)

Coming Soon

Alone With Heaven by The Saddest Landscape

Substitute by D.S.B.

May 12th

Bono / Burattini ‘Ora Sono Un Lago’ 12-inch (Maple Death)

Demmers ‘Forced Perspective’ 12-inch (Protagonist)

D.S.B. ‘Substitute’ 12-inch (General Speech)

The Saddest Landscape ‘Alone With Heaven’ 2x12inch (Iodine)

Later In May

B.O.R.N. ‘B.O.R.N.’ 12-inch (Self-Released / Restock)

Burned Up, Bled Dry ‘Next Stop…Dead Stop…’ 12-inch (Prank)

Democracy ‘Party’s Over’ 12-inch (Unlawful Assembly)

D. Sablu ‘Righteous Light’ 7-inch (11PM)

Excess Blood ‘Porcelain Doll’ 7-inch (Unlawful Assembly)

Indikator B ‘II’ 7-inch (Adult Crash)

Iris Paralysis ‘Extinguish The Sun’ 12-inch (Hertz-Schrittmacher)

Lágrimas ‘I’m Not Strong Enough For This’ 12-inch (Ruido Y Pasion)

Mock Execution ‘Democracy Shoved Up Your Ass’ 12-inch (Unlawful Assembly)

Prisão ‘Nação’ 7-inch (Adult Crash)

Screaming Fist ‘Santa Plaga’ 7-inch (Convulse)

Shaved Ape ‘Loveletter To Hardcore’ 12-inch (Sorry State)

Stingray ‘Enemy’ 12-inch (La Vida Es Un Mus)

June

Blind Eye ‘Mistrust Your Nation’ 12-inch (Wrong Speed)

Dimension ‘Fight Another Day’ 7-inch (Iron Lung)

FRSKE ‘Through The Slow Dusk’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)

Gunner ‘Reality Soldiers’ 7-inch (Iron Lung)

Hacker ‘Memory Cache’ 12-inch (Phobia)

Hiatus ‘Realms Of Nightmare’ 12-inch (Agipunk)

Hope? ‘Hell On Planet Earth’ 12-inch (Agipunk / Restock)

Klonns ‘G.A.M.E.S’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)

L.O.T.I.O.N Multinational Corporation ‘Machine Hallucinations’ 12-inch (Static Shock / Toxic State)

Morde ‘Morde’ 12-inch (Phobia)

Nightfeeder / Verdict ‘Död Åt Tyranner’ 12-inch (Phobia / Restock)

No Idols ‘No Idols’ 7-inch (Iron Lung / Restock)

Siyahkal ‘Corrupt’ 12-inch (Static Shock)

Station Model Violence ‘Station Model Violence’ 12-inch (Static Shock / Restock)

Terminal Filth / Axefear ‘Split’ 12-inch (Agipunk)

Total Control ‘Typical System’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)

Total Control ‘Henge Beat’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)

War Plague / Svaveldioxid ‘Split’ 7-inch (Phobia)

Foundation Vinyl Newsletter

Welcome

Hello and welcome to the latest edition of the Foundation Vinyl newsletter!  We have a stacked line-up this week, with five featured new arrivals to get stuck into.

We kick things off with two self-titled debut albums on Discos Enfermos – Spiritual Law bring an unforgiving, groove fuelled stomp, while Spont Ar Stad reanimate their 1980s’ UK anarcho-punk influences with a fresh fury.

We then have the savagely claustrophobic Manic Phase from Pleasure on Brainrotter Records.  Before, the emotionally charged, bleakly melodic return of Enyor with Sola D’Espart on Mendeku Diskak.

We round things off in fine style with the languidly atmospheric post-punk of Ficción with Esclavos De  Internet on No Front Teeth.

As always, we have an updated London gig listing, which features just announced London dates for Speedway (03/07) and Ostraca (16/07).  Plus, we have  a quick look at some of the great new releases heading our way in coming weeks, including next week’s fine haul that features Irked, No Peeling, Raw Distraction, Suicidas and Yleiset Syyt!

Featured New Arrivals

Sola D’Espart by Enyor / Spiritual Law by Spiritual Law / Manic Phase by Pleasure / Spont Ar Stad by Spont Ar Stad / Enclavos De Internet by Ficcion (clockwise)

‘You’ll always have a chance to joyfully create, Something that’s still fierce and raw, You tell me what’s good or bad, Can’t stand this no more’ (Spiritual Law)

Prepare to be well and truly stomped.  This is the self-titled debut full-length from Bavaria’s Spiritual Law and it’s an absolute bruiser.  The burly yet, at times, blisteringly fast fuzzed out riffage is studded with shards of bleakly ominous melody.  The whiplash solos initially carry with them a thrashier exuberance but are coloured an increasingly psychedelic hue as the album evolves.  The rhythm section locks into a groove fuelled d-beat onslaught, cymbal awash and imbued with an innately limber swing.  Meanwhile, the barked, echo drenched vocals confront a world mired in wilful ignorance, militarised violence, and strangled potential.

The sledgehammer velocity is utterly unforgiving.  There is always a temptation to immerse everything in waves of distortion (and don’t worry there is plenty of that).  However, any potential overkill is resolutely resisted and instead space is afforded to each constituent element of their sound.  This adds, despite the overriding sonic brutality, a really satisfying granularity, from the lumbering menace of the bass to the deranged hi-hat eruptions.

The venomously shifting dynamics of Slander Me and the agitated grooves of I.H.R.K. unleash the punishing body punches, before the kick drum propelled title track and the unhinged euphoria that grips The Cleansing land the killer blows.  It is an utterly frenetic and richly detailed onslaught.

‘Hi hag holl verc’hed an dispac’hoù, Disprizet hag ankouet, D’ar re a faot dezhe chanch an traoù, Trugarez da vout bet’ / ‘Her and all the women of the revolutions, Despised and forgotten, For all those that want to change things, Thank you for being’ (Nathalie Lemel)

Spont Ar Stad (State Terror) is a stirring exploration of how the constructs of power so insidiously shape our lives.  How those who exercise them seek to create a hegemonic grip on the public consciousness, disavowing the potential for change, and breeding resigned acceptance of the status quo. How they attempt to present these outcomes as just plain common sense, to silence debate as if they are a technocratic inevitability that must simply be endured.

This is the self-titled debut album from France’s Spont Ar Stad and it calls back to the roots of 1980s’ UK anarcho-punk in the vein of Zounds and early Karma Sutra.  The production is undistorted, rather than clean.  This imbues the guitar with a brittle resonance as it weaves its sombre melodies and, similarly, the rhythm section bathes in an understated analogue warmth.  This affords an unexpected clarity to the instrumentation, revealing a subtle detailing without diluting the velocity of the delivery.

The Breton vocals sit front and centre, fiercely ardent as they segue from the semi-shouted to more melodic, folk tinged, and on occasion dub leaning, expressions.  As they sweep from the powerfully layered climax to Nathalie Lemel and the deft melodic flourishes of An Arnev (The Thunder), to the rousing dual vocal chorus of Massive and the bristling Hurle Brûle (Howl Burn), Spont Ar Stad reanimate their influences with a fresh fury.

‘Spineless authoritarian, Cowards like they grovel, For an inch of kick, The white knight bathed in piss, Of a future, Unbearable’ (Swabbed)

I had the good luck to catch Pleasure on tour last year as they and Mother Nature laid waste to New River Studios.  The set kicked off with the lead singer, as I remember it, emerging from some sort of makeshift coffin.  It wasn’t entirely clear why, other than that was what he fancied doing.  It does, however, speak to the fevered, instinctual energy that permeates through every pore of their abrasively fraught debut album, Manic Phase.

And have no doubt, the Leeds band, who include members of Frisk, Total Con, and The Wound among their ranks, are in rampaging form.  A twin guitar attack forms the cornerstone – one teases out the sinuously dissonant leads and squalling solos, the other brings a more metallic brawn to bear – while the rhythm section goes about its work with a frantic relish.  The atmosphere is tensely claustrophobic, priming the desolation drenched vocals as they struggle to escape the suffocating tentacles of the surveillance state and entrenched consumerist compulsions alike.

The desperation contorted title track and the savagely seething Motivational Speaker suck us in, before the despairing urgency of Sneak and the bleakly chugging chorus to Homeowner spit us out.  Disconsolate, unsettling, and yet in a way that undeniably sparks your limbs into life.  Manic Phase is proof that amid our collective pain there is still pleasure to be found.

‘Males herbes, Creixent al nostre voltant, Llengües enverinades, Amb discursos inhumans, Manipulen i corrompen, La llibertat, Els seus cors podrits d’odi’ (A Cop De Falç) / ‘Weeds, Growing around us, Poisoned tongues, With inhuman speeches, Manipulating and corrupting, Freedom, Their hearts rotten with hate’ (With A Sickle)

Nationalism is a toxin that seems to be coursing ever more freely though public life, sowing hatred and proffering cruelly misguided panaceas.  Yet there is a much more positive flipside to the idea of belonging.  Ground-up pride in our locality and our community can be a powerful force for the collective good.  And it is this sense of place, framed through the rural anarchist traditions of Montserrat in Catalonia, that fuels Enyor’s deeply emotive second full-length, Sola D’Espart.  Indeed, the term ‘enyor’ speaks to a sense of longing, not just for that which has been lost, but even more importantly, the better futures yet to be realised.

As with their debut, there are no half-measures.  Every element is delivered with an impassioned sincerity.  The gruffly hoarse vocals, the warmly hazy guitar tones, and burly UK82 rhythms vividly conjure a very specific melancholy.  It speaks equally to the traditions of both late 1980s’ UK punk and more contemporary Iberian expressions.  Think, perhaps, of the guitar work of Frankie Stubbs braided through the anthemic stridency of say Enemic Interior and Gurs.

The mournful melodies and uproarious choruses will be what first seizes the attention.  Though, as you immerse yourself, the deft use of differing textures will be just as persuasive in bringing you back.  The cascading Stubbs-esque guitar work that propels the climax to Un Milió Més De Cops (A Million More Times).  The heart swelling layered group vocals that define Ceba Tendra (Spring Onion).  The jagged riffage of A Cop De Falç.  The fiercely dualling vocals of the climatic FTM.  It proves to be a thoroughly evocative declaration.

‘La IA avanza sin control, Sarah Connor lo advirtió, No confíes en un robot, Llegas tarde, ya eres otro…’ (Esclavos De Internet) / ‘AI is advancing unchecked, Sarah Connor warned us, Don’t trust a robot, You’re too late, you’re already someone else…’ (Slaves To The Internet)

Esclavos De Internet is the debut full-length from Ficción (Fiction), who hail from Algeciras in southern Spain.  Despite its futuristic sheen, this is something of a throwback to an earlier time in its carefree eclecticism.

Ficción forge an atmospheric blend of garage punk energy and more languid, darkly melodic post-punk restraint, which they then shroud in an understated 1980’s new wave sensibility.  The defining force throughout though is, perhaps, the keyboards as they inject a barrelling, Snuff-like hammond organ vitality that binds everything together with gusto.

Meanwhile, rather belying the album’s essential playfulness, the nasal Spanish vocals consider the growing threats to society, ranging from AI to corrupt legal systems, and ever escalating militarisation and fanaticism.  The brooding intensity of Pacto (Convenant), the mournful melodicism of the title track, and the rather more languorous closer Mujeres Armadas (Armed Women) capture the mood particularly vibrantly.

Shows And Tours

Artificial Go / New River Studios / Wednesday 13th May

Morrow / New Cross Inn / Saturday 16th May

April

29th   Sin Against Sin, Killing Me Softly, Raiden, Impermanent (New River Studios)

30th   Powerplant, Jennifer Walton (Oslo)

May

1st   Neid, Grandad, Carthage Must Be Destroyed, Filler (New River Studios)

9th   Bad Breeding, Klonns, Zenocide, The East Eights, Secrecy (Blondies Brewery)

9th   Higher Walls, Black Mould, Empty Threat (Blondies Bar)

13th   Artificial Go, No Peeling plus support (New River Studios / UK Tour)

15th  Alice Does Computer Music, Anrimeal, Lanny (The Shacklewell Arms)

15th-17th  Desertfest featuring Cavity, Deaf Club, Harrowed, Moloch and many more (Various Venues, Camden / Deaf Club UK Tour)

16th  Morrow, Copse, Jøtnarr, Gilded Cage (New Cross Inn)

20th  Prisão, Knome, Lost Cause, Catastrophe (New River Studios)

21st  Sarsour, Snake Easter, Ikhras, Mashaal, Rat’s Breath (New River Studios)

22nd  Angel Dust, Agency, Speedway, Scab (100 Club / Sold Out)

22nd  Guttersnipe, Sublux, Mammal Panic (New River Studios)

24th Tiikeri plus support (New River Studios / UK Tour)

28th  Screensaver plus support (The Shacklewell Arms / UK Tour)

28th  Nagasaki Sunrise plus support (tbc / UK Tour)

29th  AyucabaDark Thoughts, Skintern, Secrecy (New River Studios / UK Tour)

29th  Sex Germs, Ruined Virtue, Most Crevice, Crude Image, Gutter Carrion, MB93 (Old Blue Last)

29th  Algae Bloom, Cold Holding, incaseyouleave, I’m Sorry Emil, Closed Hands (New Cross Inn)

30th  Texas Is The Reason plus support (Islington Assembly Hall / UK Tour)

June

2nd  Merzbow with Cavalera and Bernocchi, Microcorps  (Iklectik / Sold Out)

3rd  Merzbow, Nina Garcia (Iklectik / Sold Out)

5th  Acid Reign plus support (The Underworld / UK Tour)

7th  Merzbow, Elvin Brandhi (Iklectik)

11th  Drain, Pest Control plus more (The Underworld / Sold Out)

13th  Soga, Gimic, Leashed, Gross Misconduct (New River Studios / UK Tour)

13th  Oi Polloi, Rank, Contract Killer, Wind Of Knives, Dinosaur Skull (New Cross Inn)

18th  Twenty One Children, Ursula, State Sanctioned Violence, Skunkai (New Cross Inn)

20th  Knuckledust, Stampin’ Ground, Grove Street, 50 Caliber, Born From Pain, Tempers Fray (The Underworld / Sold Out)

20th  Nuovo Testamento plus support (Oslo)

23rd  Agriculture, Healing Wound plus more (Bush Hall)

25th  Contention, Clique plus more (New Cross Inn)

July

3rd  Speedway, Feels Like Heaven plus more (The Blue Monk / UK Tour)

5th  Stress Positions plus support (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)

6th  Diploid, Filler plus more (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)

9th  Tethered, Brach, Every Face Becomes A Skull (Calamity Tank)

9th  Shai Hulud, Afraid To Die plus more (New Cross Inn)

10th-11th  Mongrel Fest featuring The Chisel, Imposter, Last Affront, Scab, The Social, T.S. Warspite plus many more (Venue tbc)

10th  Agnostic Front, D.R.I., Under The Influence (The Underworld)

16th  Ostraca, Cady, Jøtnarr, Carpenter (Piehouse Co-op)

23rd  Racetraitor, Hour Of Reprisal, Temple Guard, Afraid To Die (New Cross Inn)

26th  JK Flesh, Black Leather Jesus, Kleistwahr, Helm (Oslo)

September

19th  Spy, Spaced, Dry Socket (The Underworld / UK Tour)

October

17th  Avskum, Earth To Dust plus more (New Cross Inn)

November

19th  The Hope Conspiracy plus support (The Underworld)

Coming Soon

Canciones Malditas by Suicidas

The Greivance by Irked

May 5th

Irked ‘The Grievance’ 12-inch (Wrong Speed)

No Peeling ‘EP2’ 7-inch (Wrong Speed / Feel It)

Raw Distractions ‘奇しく燃える’ 12-inch (La Vida Es Un Mus)

Suicidas ‘Canciones Malditas’ 12-inch (La Vida Es Un Mus)

Yleiset Syyt ‘Saitte Mitä Halusitte’ 12-inch (La Vida Es Un Mus)

Later In May

Bono / Burattini ‘Ora Sono Un Lago’ 12-inch (Maple Death)

B.O.R.N. ‘B.O.R.N.’ 12-inch (Self-Released / Restock)

D. Sablu ‘Righteous Light’ 7-inch (11PM)

Demmers ‘Forced Perspective’ 12-inch (Protagonist)

Dimension ‘Fight Another Day’ 7-inch (Iron Lung)

D.S.B. ‘Substitute’ 12-inch (General Speech)

FRSKE ‘Through The Slow Dusk’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)

Gunner ‘Reality Soldiers’ 7-inch (Iron Lung)

Hiatus ‘Realms Of Nightmare’ 12-inch (Agipunk)

Hope? ‘Hell On Planet Earth’ 12-inch (Agipunk / Restock)

Indikator B ‘II’ 7-inch (Adult Crash)

Iris Paralysis ‘Extinguish The Sun’ 12-inch (Hertz-Schrittmacher)

Klonns ‘G.A.M.E.S’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)

Lágrimas ‘I’m Not Strong Enough For This’ 12-inch (Ruido Y Pasion)

No Idols ‘No Idols’ 7-inch (Iron Lung / Restock)

Prisão ‘Nação’ 7-inch (Adult Crash)

Screaming Fist ‘Santa Plaga’ 7-inch (Convulse)

Shaved Ape ‘Loveletter To Hardcore’ 12-inch (Sorry State)

Stingray ‘Enemy’ 12-inch (La Vida Es Un Mus)

Terminal Filth / Axefear ‘Split’ 12-inch (Agipunk)

The Saddest Landscape ‘Alone With Heaven’ 2x12inch (Iodine)

Total Control ‘Typical System’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)

Total Control ‘Henge Beat’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)

June

Hacker ‘Memory Cache’ 12-inch (Phobia)

Morde ‘Morde’ 12-inch (Phobia)

Nightfeeder / Verdict ‘Död Åt Tyranner’ 12-inch (Phobia / Restock)

Siyahkal ‘Corrupt’ 12-inch (Static Shock)

War Plague / Svaveldioxid ‘Split’ 7-inch (Phobia)

Foundation Vinyl Newsletter

Welcome

Hello and welcome to the latest edition of the Foundation Vinyl newsletter!  A packed to the rafters New River Studios was the place to be on Saturday night as Kaleidoscope popped over to top an absolutely banging line-up.

The evening kicked off with Second Death sadly bidding us farewell with a typically discordant vehemence.  Next up was Stingray who are always a formidable live proposition.  Yet even by their own ferocious standards, they served up an absolute sledgehammer of a set, perhaps, buoyed by the release next month of their latest 12-inch, Enemy.  If the new tracks aired tonight are anything to go by, we are all in for quite a treat.  And then Barcelona’s Shakti brought their punchily limber rhythms and bristling Marathi vocals to bear in pulsating style.

Kaleidoscope were charged with bringing an already cracking evening to a close and that they did in blistering style.  The New York trio had been on something of a hiatus before returning last year with the utterly compelling Cities Of Fear.  Their infectious cocktail of tautly coiled anarcho-punk inspired hardcore and fiercely rhythmic vocals sparked an already primed crowd into an even more exuberant response.

I remember many years ago seeing Bad Religion asked the question what matters most – music or lyrics.  It always struck me as a reductive framing.  In the best hardcore, they are intrinsically intertwined, each feeding off the other.  Kaleidoscope embody this interdependency perfectly.  So yes, of course, on one level it was the riffs that sent the bodies flying in all directions, but the intensity of the performance, and the visceral reaction that it demands, is equally born of the political convictions that energise the band.  It was an incendiary set and one that left you in no doubt as to why you fell in love with hardcore in the first place.

And so, what do we have lined up this week?  First up, we have two releases from Wrong Speed Records – the sinuously urgent return of Hey Colossus with Heaven Was Wild and the bludgeoning grooves of Bloody Head with Bend Down And Kiss The Ground.

Next, on Kick Rock Records, we have two very contrasting releases – the bleakly blackened hardcore of Nohz with Slumber Between The Walls and then the contagiously catchy power pop of Can You Keep A Secret? from Plastic Tones.

We round things off in style with the noise infused post-punk of Dog Chocolate on So Inspired, So Done In, courtesy of Upset The Rhythm.

As always, we have an updated London gig listing, including just a announced Dark Thoughts UK Tour (London 29/05).  Plus, we have  a quick look at some of the great new releases heading our way in coming weeks, including next week’s fine haul that features Enyor, Ficcion, Spiritual Law, Spont Ar Stad and Traumatizer!

Featured New Arrivals

Heaven Was Wild by Hey Colossus / Can You Keep A Secret by Plastic Tones / So Inspired, So Done In by Dog Chocolate / Bend Down And Kiss The Ground by Bloody Head / Slumber Between Rotten Walls by Nohz (clockwise)

‘I want a model life, You hear they’re all the rage, I want to live it right, But I’ve got bills to pay, Another pointless form, Be sure it’s never late’ (Clocks)

Longevity can be born of many admirable virtues – friendship, trust, the shared confidence to experiment.  But, by the same token, it can also become mired in less attractive qualities – inertia, staleness, paths of least resistance.

The dangers of the latter taking root in a band who have been together for twenty plus years, and some fifteen albums, would seem almost overwhelming.  But Hey Colossus are vibrant proof that it is by no means inevitable.  That such experience, such bonds can be harnessed for the positive and certainly need not be a chain that constrains.

None of this happened by accident mind.  The band consciously set out to push themselves and each other.  They took their new material out on the road, playing four sold out shows in four nights in four different corners of London, refining and honing each track in the live setting.  They then took this same ethos straight into the studio – just five days, playing live, playing loud.  Heaven Was Wild is a vivid testament to the success of these efforts.  The trademarks of Hey Colossus’ noise rock infused post-hardcore are all firmly in place, with each now smouldering with a fresh intensity.

The supple muscularity of the rhythm section provides a fluid yet rock solid cornerstone.  The sinuous waves of brightly sharp riffage morph and reformulate as they lock into surging grooves or disassemble into more reflective excursions, without ever losing sight of their original identity.  The vocals add another dynamic layer as they segue from crooning drawls to more stridently assertive expressions with an impressive dexterity, bringing to mind an unholy, yet strangely considered, union of Jack Terricloth (World/Inferno Friendship Society) and Conrad Keely (And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of Dead).

There is so much to get your teeth stuck into.  The richly layered dual vocals of Clock and the contagiously driving intensity of Death And Deliverance provide an exhilarating one-two.  The death rock-tinged Consequences and the languid swing of Party Of Fleas offer more restrained but no less enticing pleasures.  Heaven Was Wild is an album born of an instinct to get down raw and fresh, and it has paid off in spades.

‘There’s a thousand ways, A thousand ways to pray, There’s a thousand different ways to, To bend down and kiss the ground’ (Bend Down And The Kiss The Ground)

Bend Down And Kiss The Ground explores one of humanity’s most enduring frailties.  Our willingness to take solace in empty promises and knowing refuge in convenient excuses.  From the glib solutions of politicians and the self-serving narratives of populist opportunists to the endless promises of delayed celestial reward.  Anything but to face up to the true causes of our malaise.

Hailing from Nottingham, and featuring members of Army Of Flying Robots, Blind Eye, and Moloch, Bloody Head are back with their follow up to 2024’s Perpetual Eden.  Despite this being the band’s fifth album over the past decade, I must confess that this is my first encounter with them – and I’m rather delighted to have made their acquaintance.

Bend Down And The Kiss Ground sees the band continue to hone a sound that brings a pronounced metallic heft to bear on their already burly post-hardcore heart and then braids it through elements of doom and sludge, before finishing with a squalling noise rock aesthetic.  It is a powerfully immersive blend and one that Bloody Head handle with an assured confidence, and no little craft.  It evokes, for me at least, shades of both Corrosion Of Conformity’s Blind and The Rollins Band’s The End Of Silence, not least in the shared dynamics of how brooding menace is so deftly married with a slam hard hardcore velocity.

Side one comprises three tracks.  Children Of The Dusk is built around a savagely compelling central riff, while the title track is defined by the sledgehammer rhythm section, before the bleakly ruminative instrumental, Vibratory Affinity.  The flipside features just a single track.  Time, As Veiled Eternity unfurls through three distinct phases.  It opens with wah-wah guitar tones, industrial rhythms, and anarcho-style, semi-shouted vocals, before subsiding into a more introspective passage of spoken word and haunting melody, and then locks into an utterly bludgeoning groove for the finale.

The album spans 32 minutes.  I mention this only because I know many of us get sweaty palms at the thought of hardcore bands getting all prog with their three-minute odysseys.  But you needn’t worry.  The dynamics of the four tracks are constructed and layered with such skill that they never even hint at outstaying their welcome.  Indeed, the end invariably catches you slightly by surprise, so all enveloping is the onslaught.

‘They dispossess us, Try to fix it, Around a cup of tea they already spat in, A presentation, Always a circle, Dreamy plantations you’ve always been longing for’ (Concrete’s Discipline)

Slumber Between Rotten Walls tells the story of how the all-pervasive forces of real estate capital are reshaping the cities that we live in.  Homes become merely units to realise investment yield.  Communities are told that they no longer warrant their place in the heart of the city.  Infrastructure becomes governed by the demands of segregation and surveillance.

This is the first vinyl release from Toulouse’s Nohz.  Their savagely blackened hardcore perfectly embodies this cycle of decay, deceit, and displacement.  The guitars are bleakly atonal yet also cleaner than we might expect, the scrappy leanness of the riffs eliciting unexpected thoughts of black metal suffused garage punk.  The burly rhythm sections injects a limber swing to the battery, while the bestial, echo drenched vocals dissect a world that is slowly dissolving around us, our histories erased by the shameless pursuit of profit.

The searing opener Concrete’s Discipline sets the tone with an unforgiving authority, and it is one that is remorselessly maintained as Nohz sweep from the groove fuelled Broken Teeth, to the venomously cascading squall of DPDR, and the melancholy flecked Dull Crown.  A darkly insidious debut.

‘And I would fall in love with anyone, Who showed a little bit of kindness, I never knew how to give it to myself, Now I see it was blindness’ (Dynamo)

Musical genres are by there very nature open to interpretation, but few are quite as slippery as that of power pop.  But, if I had to point someone to a record that I felt captured the essence of what I think it is, We’re All In This Together by Plastic Tones – the Helsinki band’s third full-length – would be pretty much at the top of the list.

So, what are the ingredients that we’re talking about?  Classic new wave forms the base and is then laced through a healthy slug of the punk vitality, together with a notable indie pop melodicism, and is then rounded off with a shed load of sing-along choruses that relish a certain 1980s’ rock bombast, even including a knowing nod to Bonnie Tyler.  Think, perhaps, of Chin-Chin and The Go-Gos whipped up with Supercrush and you will be heading, at least partly, in the right direction.

The guitars are brightly melodic with a hint of shimmering fuzz and just enough underlying heft not to float away, while the rhythm section bounces along with a languid restraint.  It is, perhaps, the vocals though that bring everything resolutely into focus.  Vocalist Tytti, who also fronts synth punks Modem, is in imperious form.  The key is that for all her strident, clean sung melodic power, she retains the dexterity to ensure that the shifts in emotional nuance are never overwhelmed. The album’s jauntily upbeat energy, however, belies some rather darker lyrical themes as it contemplates our lack of grace and understanding towards both ourselves and those around us.

The standout moments come thick and fast, from the irrepressible We’re All In This Together and the soaring climax to Dynamo, to the infectiously chugging Change My World and the sheer drama of Waste Another Day.  Sounds to kick start your summer in style.

‘I say I wanna do it again, But what life is now, Is not what life was then, Not better, not worse, just different’ (Fun Is Always Brilliant)

Dog Chocolate return with their fourth album, So Inspired, So Done In, their first since 2018’s Moody Balloon Baby.  Sinewy guitar and a spryly fluid rhythm section remain at the heart of their frantically anxious post-punk.  They are intertwined with a raggedly off-kilter art punk instinct that in turn wrestles with a more strident, constantly simmering noise rock discordance.  At first glance, these latter two influences might seem unlikely bedfellows, yet their mutual inclination towards the abrasive provides a fruitful common ground.

The nasally agitated vocals, with plenty of drawled detached backing, wryly meditate on both the mundane and the absurd that shape our daily lives, covering everything from unfortunate rashes to unfinished tattoos.  The evolving role of work emerges as a recurring theme and not least how society increasingly seeks to disguise insecurity and precariousness as flexibility and opportunity.

So Inspired, So Done In revels in its contrasts.  Playful yet tense. Whimsical yet serious.  Restless yet contemplative.  As it roves from the rhythmic tirade of Employee to the tautly writhing Springfield Library Haunting , before exploring the dissonant electronics of No Pavement Story and the sombre, richly layered Worst Jobs In History, it proves an album of jarring, restless invention.

Shows And Tours

Bad Breeding and Klonns / Blondies Brewery / Saturday 9th May

Powerplant / Oslo / Thursday 30th April

April

25th   Sick Thoughts, Gold Cup plus more (The Shacklewell Arms)

30th   Powerplant, Jennifer Walton (Oslo)

May

9th   Bad Breeding, Klonns, Zenocide, The East Eights, Secrecy (Blondies Brewery)

9th   Higher Walls, Black Mould, Empty Threat (Blondies Bar)

13th   Artificial Go, No Peeling plus support (New River Studios / UK Tour)

15th  Alice Does Computer Music, Anrimeal, Lanny (The Shacklewell Arms)

15th-17th  Desertfest featuring Deaf Club, Harrowed, Moloch and many more (Various Venues, Camden / Deaf Club UK Tour)

16th  Morrow, Copse, Jøtnarr, Gilded Cage (New Cross Inn)

20th  Prisão, Knome, Lost Cause, Catastrophe (New River Studios)

21st  Zanjeer, Snake Easter, Ikhras, Mashaal, Rat’s Breath (New River Studios)

22nd  Guttersnipe, Sublux, Mammal Panic (New River Studios)

24th Tiikeri plus support (New River Studios / UK Tour)

28th  Screensaver plus support (The Shacklewell Arms / UK Tour)

28th  Nagasaki Sunrise plus support (tbc / UK Tour)

29th  Ayucaba, Dark Thoughts plus more (New River Studios / UK Tour)

29th  Sex Germs, Ruined Virtue, Most Crevice, Crude Image, Gutter Carrion, MB93 (Old Blue Last)

29th  Algae Bloom, Cold Holding, incaseyouleave, I’m Sorry Emil, Closed Hands (New Cross Inn)

30th  Texas Is The Reason plus support (Islington Assembly Hall / UK Tour)

June

2nd  Merzbow with Cavalera and Bernocchi, Microcorps  (Iklectik / Sold Out)

3rd  Merzbow, Nina Garcia (Iklectik / Sold Out)

5th  Acid Reign plus support (The Underworld / UK Tour)

7th  Merzbow, Elvin Brandhi (Iklectik)

11th  Drain, Pest Control plus more (The Underworld / Sold Out)

13th  Soga, Gimic, Leashed, Gross Misconduct (New River Studios / UK Tour)

13th  Oi Polloi, Rank, Contract Killer, Wind Of Knives, Dinosaur Skull (New Cross Inn)

20th  Knuckledust, Stampin’ Ground, Grove Street, 50 Caliber, Born From Pain, Tempers Fray (The Underworld / Sold Out)

20th  Nuovo Testamento plus support (Oslo)

23rd  Agriculture, Healing Wound plus more (Bush Hall)

25th  Contention, Clique plus more (New Cross Inn)

July

5th  Stress Positions plus support (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)

6th  Diploid, Filler plus more (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)

9th  Tethered, Brach, Every Face Becomes A Skull (Calamity Tank)

9th  Shai Hulud, Afraid To Die plus more (New Cross Inn)

10th-11th  Mongrel Fest featuring The Chisel, Imposter, Last Affront, Scab, The Social, T.S. Warspite plus many more (Venue tbc)

10th  Agnostic Front, D.R.I., Under The Influence (The Underworld)

23rd  Racetraitor, Hour Of Reprisal, Temple Guard, Afraid To Die (New Cross Inn)

September

19th  Spy, Spaced, Dry Socket (The Underworld / UK Tour)

October

17th  Avskum, Earth To Dust plus more (New Cross Inn)

November

19th  The Hope Conspiracy plus support (The Underworld)

Coming Soon

Sola D’Espart by Enyor

Spiritual Law by Spiritual Law

April 28th

Ameretat ‘Ameretat’ 12-inch (La Vida Es Un Mus Discos / Restock)

Enyor ‘Sola D’Espart’ 12-inch (Mendeku Diskak)

Ficcion ‘Esclavos De Internet’ 12-inch (No Front Teeth)

Spiritual Law ‘Spiritual Law’ 12-inch (Discos Enfermos)

Spont Ar Stad ‘Spont Ar Stad’ 12-inch (Discos Enfermos)

Station Model Violence ‘Station Model Violence’ 12-inch (Static Shock Records / Restock)

Traumatizer ‘Nuclear War Machine’ 7-inch (Discos Enfermos / Restock)

May 5th

Irked ‘The Grievance’ 12-inch (Wrong Speed)

No Peeling ‘EP2’ 7-inch (Wrong Speed / Feel It)

Pleasure ‘Manic Phase’ 12-inch (Brainrotter)

Raw Distractions ‘奇しく燃える’ 12-inch (La Vida Es Un Mus)

Yleiset Syyt ‘Saitte Mitä Halusitte’ 12-inch (La Vida Es Un Mus)

Later In May

Bono / Burattini ‘Ora Sono Un Lago’ 12-inch (Maple Death)

B.O.R.N. ‘B.O.R.N.’ 12-inch (Self-Released / Restock)

D. Sablu ‘Righteous Light’ 7-inch (11PM)

Demmers ‘Forced Perspective’ 12-inch (Protagonist)

Dimension ‘Fight Another Day’ 7-inch (Iron Lung)

FRSKE ‘Through The Slow Dusk’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)

Gunner ‘Reality Soldiers’ 7-inch (Iron Lung)

Hiatus ‘Realms Of Nightmare’ 12-inch (Agipunk)

Hope? ‘Hell On Planet Earth’ 12-inch (Agipunk / Restock)

Indikator B ‘II’ 7-inch (Adult Crash)

Klonns ‘G.A.M.E.S’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)

Lágrimas ‘I’m Not Strong Enough For This’ 12-inch (Ruido Y Pasion)

No Idols ‘No Idols’ 7-inch (Iron Lung / Restock)

Prisão ‘Nação’ 7-inch (Adult Crash)

Screaming Fist ‘Santa Plaga’ 7-inch (Convulse)

Shaved Ape ‘Loveletter To Hardcore’ 12-inch (Sorry State)

Suicidas ‘Canciones Malditas’ 12-inch (La Vida Es Un Mus)

Stingray ‘Enemy’ 12-inch (La Vida Es Un Mus)

Terminal Filth / Axefear ‘Split’ 12-inch (Agipunk)

The Saddest Landscape ‘Alone With Heaven’ 2x12inch (Iodine)

Total Control ‘Typical System’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)

Total Control ‘Henge Beat’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)

June

Hacker ‘Memory Cache’ 12-inch (Phobia)

Morde ‘Morde’ 12-inch (Phobia)

Nightfeeder / Verdict ‘Död Åt Tyranner’ 12-inch (Phobia / Restock)

Siyahkal ‘Corrupt’ 12-inch (Static Shock)

War Plague / Svaveldioxid ‘Split’ 7-inch (Phobia)

Foundation Vinyl Newsletter

Welcome

Hello and welcome to the latest Foundation Vinyl newsletter!  Regular readers will know that I retain a love for a specific strain of 1990s’ metallic hardcore, a lineage that I guess began with Culture and Unbroken, before running through to Catharsis and Trial.  Bang in the middle of that timeline is Morning Again, so I was delighted to be able to finally catch them at The Black Heart on Sunday as they played their first ever London show.

A bit of a spanner was thrown into the works ahead of this short Euro stint due to an unfortunate injury to vocalist Kevin Byers.  But few bands have the luxury of reaching back into their alumni to call on the services of the irrepressible Damien Moyal (As Friends Rust / Culture) to step into the breach.  From the bellowed crowd cry of ‘Love is never wrong’ during Stones through to the exuberant pile on during God Framed Me, it was a cracking evening.

And so, what do we have lined up this week?  We kick things off with five excellent featured new arrivals.  Mother Nature bring the stomp and the serpentine with their new 7-inch, Language Of A Peaceful Mind, on Donor Records.  Before the unforgiving raw d-beat punk of B.O.R.N. on their self-titled debut 12-inch.

Then, we hand over the reins to Flexidiscos.  First up, we have the reissue of Tiikeri’s jauntily raucous debut album, Punk Rock Pamaus!!! Next, we have two strikingly contrasting synth punk albums – the mournfully atmospheric self-titled debut from Colegiata and the unhinged hyperactivity of Sistema De Entretenmiento on 300 Noches Sin Dormir.

As always, we have an updated London gig listing, with shows this week from Crazy Spirit, Kaleidoscope, and Faze among others, as well as a just announced Diploid tour (London 06/07).  Plus, we have  a quick look at some of the great new releases heading our way in coming weeks, including next week’s fine haul that features Bloody Head, Hey Colossus, Nohz, Plastic Tones, and Stabber!

Featured New Arrivals

B.O.R.N. by B.O.R.N. / Punk Rock Paumaus!!! by Tiikeri / 300 Noches Sin Dormir by Sistema De Entretenimiento / Colegiata by Colegiata / Language Of A Peaceful Mind  by Mother Nature (clockwise)

‘Terrible feeling pulls the rug beneath my feet, Retreat, recoil, I think I change my mind, Now you think of what you’ll leave behind’ (At Peace)

Mother Nature are back with a new 7-inch and follow-up to last year’s debut 12-inch, Living, Joyful And Free.  The Leeds band, who feature members of Perspex Flesh, The Flex and Mob Rules among others, are once again in rampaging form, bringing the stomp and the serpentine, the burly and the weird, to bear with equal relish.

Both tracks – At Peace and Language Of A Peaceful Mind – are brilliantly crafted.  Tensely claustrophobic and anxiously convulsing, they draw us remorselessly into their unsettling embrace.  The tautly angular guitar smoulders with a delicious off-kilter twang, while the rhythm section brings a rugged yet loping swagger to proceedings, not to mention some typically bruising bass lines.

Meanwhile, the guttural barked vocals are deftly intertwined throughout with ominously whispered spoken word.  This only adds to the air of insidious unease as Mother Nature explore themes of mortality, nurture, and finding a way to live amid the pain and uncertainty.  Donor Records, as always, do a bang-up job pulling it all together.

‘From victim to oppressor, Life cycle of abuse…Made to be productive, Productive’s what they tell you’ (The Farm)

Right, we’re talking raw d-beat hardcore.  Imagine every element dialled up to what you think is the max.  Now, just push it that little bit further, further than perhaps feels wise, until every bone in your body is shuddering.  There you go – welcome to the sonic violence of Birmingham, Alabama’s B.O.R.N.

The band’s acronym stands for Belligerent Onslaught Relentless Noise, which is undeniably pretty apt.  Having honed their sound across a slew of cassette-only releases since 2022, this represents the band’s debut vinyl release.  The trio are not seeking to dramatically reinvent their influences, but what they do with an unabashed zeal is deliver every element with an absolutely venomous intent.

The guitar tone is filthily blown out.  The waves of surging riffage are leavened only by squalling, blink-and-you-miss solos, while the primitive drums lock in with, bar the occasional indulgence of a fleeting tom roll, a thudding singularity.  The barked vocals are delivered with more of a classic hardcore cadence as they build connections between economic exploitation, gentrification, escalating militarisation, and a society programmed to punch down.  The eight tracks are unleashed in just twelve unforgiving minutes, the velocity vividly embodied by the seething Local Outsider, the choppy fury of Moved West, and the pneumatic groove of the closer, Reprise.

‘Punk ei oo mikään vaihe nuoruuden, Mä tiukin sanoin kiistän kyllä sen, Se mulle on yhtä kuin elämä’ (Uskon Punkkareihin) / ‘Punk is not a phase of youth, I strongly deny that, It is the same as life for me’ (I Believe In Punks)

This is a reissue of the long sold-out debut album from Tiikeri, Punk Rock Paumaus!!! It was first self-released in Europe by the band, who hail from Turku in Finland, back in 2023, and has since been followed up by a trio of equally well received EPs.  The band’s core inspiration is very much drawn from late 1970s’ punk, which is then laced through with more contemporary pop punk influences.

And while all of that is stylistically true, the essence of Tiikeri lies much more in the sheer energy and joy that permeates every aspect of what they do.  Now, don’t get me wrong, I suspect that some of the more whimsical elements of Tiikeri’s aesthetic might well grate in the wrong hands.  But those possible hang ups rather melt away in the face of the band’s enthusiasm and sincerity.  Punk Rock Paumaus!!! is a very personal celebration of punk and what it has brought to the individual lives of the band members, both in terms music and, just as importantly, values.

At first listen, the music itself can strike as straightforward.  Yet, this belies the band’s unerring ear for a hook and capturing a melody that you simply won’t be able to shake.  Not to mention their absolute mastery of a well-placed layered harmony and a well-judged ‘woah’.  The dexterity of their song writing whips each of these elements into a jauntily raucous ride as they sweep from the rollicking Atria Ja HK (Ei Oo OK) to the more plaintively melodic Uskon Punkkareihin.  This is a record made with the express intention of putting smiles on faces and it is an invitation that is hard to resist.

‘Algún dia escaperé de aqui, de mi familia y lo que, quieren de mi, Franco ha muerto, campo abierto’ (Campo Abierto) / ‘One day I will escape from here, from my family and what they want from me, Franco is dead, open field’ (Open Field)

This is the debut album from Barcelona synth punks Colegiata and it is quite the unassuming treat.  The synths pulse with a certain analogue warmth and the percussion is crisply motorik as the duo conjure an atmosphere that ambiguously lurks somewhere between mournful regret and quiet euphoria.  The tonal palette is an essentially austere one, yet subtle melodic shifts, partnered with rather more abrupt changes through the rhythmic gears ensure that it never veers into the monochrome.

The vocals closely mirror those oscillating rhythms, largely bathed in a drawled detachment, but not averse to launching into rather more strident proclamations.  Lyrically, they are born of a very particular juncture in Spanish history.  The moment when the optimism of finally emerging from the fascist shadow of Franco ran into the implacable grip of the all-pervasive Catholic church, a slowly suffocating influence at both home and school.

As it spans the menacing escalation Señor Director (Mr. Director) and the brooding restraint of Labor Omnia Vincit (Work Conquers All), before the languorously infectious El Graduado (The Graduate) and the combatively throbbing closer Soy Una Punk (I’m A Punk), it proves a thoroughly evocative journey.

‘No quiero salir al exterior, Hace años quey a no veo el sol, Mis músculor ya no servirán, Mis amigos nunca más me verán’ / ‘I don’t want to go outside, I haven’t seen the sun in years, My muscles will be useless now, My friends will never see me again’ (Mis Amigos Nunca Más Me Verán)

Unless we’re careful, we can find ourselves living amid a maelstrom of never-ending notifications and ceaseless updates that serve to fracture attention and prime an endless doomscroll, aided by an app for every neurosis that technological intrusion sowed in the first place.  300 Noches Sin Dormir (300 Sleepless Nights) is a relentlessly hyperactive manifestation of this malaise.

This is the second album from synth punks Sistema De Entretenmiento (System Of Entertainment), who hail from Mollet del Vallès in Catalonia, and follows up their 2022 self-titled debut.  The band refer to their music as ‘Arcade Punk’, which certainly captures the essential spirit of their sound.  It is effervescently restless synth punk that is refracted through an abrasively lo-fi lens to conjure an utterly frenetic exuberance that stalks the line between nervously glitching agitation and unhinged hedonism.

The crisply precise bass and drum machine, together with the brittle shards of guitar, form the scaffolding of the sixteen tracks.  But it is the manically skittering synths and energetically layered vocals that put the flesh on those bones.  Intriguingly for an album drenched in such primary colours, including its anime artwork, it is fuelled by an exploration of the rather less wholesome, and often intentional, blurring of what is real and what is fake that increasingly defines our lives.

Indeed, the tracks when these darker impulses gain the upper hand – the ominous pulse Zona Desconocida (Unknown Zone), the languorous swing of Soy Un Rocker Y Perdedor (I’m Rocker And A Loser), and the futuristic melodies of Fantasma En la Maquina (Ghost In The Machine) – are perhaps the standout moments.

Shows And Tours

Crazy Spirit (Friday 17th April) / Kaleidoscope (Saturday 18th April) / New River Studios

MIA and Bleakness / New River Studios / Wednesday 15th April

April

15th  MIA, Bleakness, Last Affront, One By One (New River Studios / Bleakness UK Tour)

15th  Primitive Man, Kollaps, Sea Bastard (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)

17th  Earth Ball, CIA Debutante, Split Apex (Cafe Oto / UK Tour)

17th  Crazy Spirit, Rat Cage , Morrreadoras, Low And Behold (New River Studios)

18th  KaleidoscopeLameShakti, StingraySecond Death (New River Studios)

18th  The Restarts, Śmierć, Haavat (New Cross Inn)

19th  Faze, Skintern plus more (The Shacklewell Arms / UK Tour)

20th   Orcutt Shelley Miller, Earth Ball (Cafe Oto / Sold Out)

22nd   Speed, Whispers, Bodyweb (Electric Ballroom)

24th   Kowloon Walled City plus support (The Black Heart / Sold Out)

25th   Sick Thoughts, Gold Cup plus more (The Shacklewell Arms)

30th   Powerplant, Jennifer Walton (Oslo)

May

9th   Bad Breeding, Klonns, Zenocide, The East Eights, Secrecy (Blondies Brewery)

9th   Higher Walls, Black Mould, Empty Threat (Blondies Bar)

13th   Artificial Go, No Peeling plus support (New River Studios / UK Tour)

15th  Alice Does Computer Music, Anrimeal, Lanny (The Shacklewell Arms)

15th-17th  Desertfest featuring Deaf Club, Harrowed, Moloch and many more (Various Venues, Camden / Deaf Club UK Tour)

16th  Morrow, Copse, Jøtnarr, Gilded Cage (New Cross Inn)

20th  Prisão, Knome, Lost Cause, Catastrophe (New River Studios)

21st  Zanjeer, Snake Easter, Ikhras, Mashaal, Rat’s Breath (New River Studios)

24th Tiikeri plus support (New River Studios / UK Tour)

28th  Screensaver plus support (The Shacklewell Arms / UK Tour)

28th  Nagasaki Sunrise plus support (tbc / UK Tour)

29th  Ayucaba plus support (New River Studios / UK Tour)

29th  Sex Germs, Ruined Virtue, Most Crevice, Crude Image, Gutter Carrion, MB93 (Old Blue Last)

29th  Algae Bloom, Cold Holding, incaseyouleave, I’m Sorry Emil, Closed Hands (New Cross Inn)

30th  Texas Is The Reason plus support (Islington Assembly Hall / UK Tour)

June

2nd  Merzbow with Cavalera and Bernocchi, Microcorps  (Iklectik / Sold Out)

3rd  Merzbow, Nina Garcia (Iklectik / Sold Out)

5th  Acid Reign plus support (The Underworld / UK Tour)

7th  Merzbow, Elvin Brandhi (Iklectik)

11th  Drain, Pest Control plus more (The Underworld / Sold Out)

13th  Soga, Gimic, Leashed. Gross Misconduct (New River Studios / UK Tour)

13th  Oi Polloi, Rank, Contract Killer, Wind Of Knives, Dinosaur Skull (New Cross Inn)

20th  Knuckledust, Stampin’ Ground, Grove Street, 50 Caliber, Born From Pain, Tempers Fray (The Underworld / Sold Out)

20th  Nuovo Testamento plus support (Oslo)

23rd  Agriculture, Healing Wound plus more (Bush Hall)

25th  Contention, Clique plus more (New Cross Inn)

July

5th  Stress Positions plus support (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)

6th  Diploid, Filler plus more (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)

9th  Tethered, Brach, Every Face Becomes A Skull (Calamity Tank)

9th  Shai Hulud, Afraid To Die plus more (New Cross Inn)

10th-11th  Mongrel Fest featuring The Chisel, Imposter, Last Affront, Scab, The Social, T.S. Warspite plus many more (Venue tbc)

10th  Agnostic Front, D.R.I., Under The Influence (The Underworld)

23rd  Racetraitor, Hour Of Reprisal plus more (New Cross Inn)

September

19th  Spy, Spaced, Dry Socket (The Underworld / UK Tour)

October

17th  Avskum, Earth To Dust plus more (New Cross Inn)

November

19th  The Hope Conspiracy plus support (The Underworld

Coming Soon

Heaven Was Wild by Hey Colossus

Bend Down And Kiss The Ground by Bloody Head

April 21st

Ameretat ‘Ameretat’ 12-inch (La Vida Es Un Mus Discos / Restock)

Bloody Head ‘Bend Down And Kiss The Ground’ 12-inch (Wrong Speed)

Hey Colossus ‘Heaven Was Wild’ 12-inch (Wrong Speed)

Nohz ‘Slumber Between Rotten Walls’ 12-inch (Kick Rock)

Plastic Tones ‘Can You Keep A Secret?’ 12-inch (Kick Rock)

Stabber ‘II’ 7-inch (Kick Rock)

Station Model Violence ‘Station Model Violence’ 12-inch (Static Shock Records / Restock)

April 28th

Dog Chocolate ‘So Inspired, So Done In’ 12-inch (Upset The Rhythm)

Enyor ‘Sola D’Espart’ 12-inch (Mendeku Diskak)

Ficcion ‘Esclavos De Internet’ 12-inch (No Front Teeth)

Spiritual Law ‘Spiritual Law’ 12-inch (Discos Enfermos)

Spont Ar Stad ‘Spont Ar Stad’ 12-inch (Discos Enfermos)

Traumatizer ‘Nuclear War Machine’ 7-inch (Discos Enfermos / Restock)

May 5th

Irked ‘The Grievance’ 12-inch (Wrong Speed)

No Peeling ‘EP2’ 7-inch (Wrong Speed / Feel It)

Pleasure ‘Manic Phase’ 12-inch (Brainrotter)

Raw Distractions ‘奇しく燃える’ 12-inch (La Vida Es Un Mus)

Yleiset Syyt ‘Saitte Mitä Halusitte’ 12-inch (La Vida Es Un Mus)

Later In May

Afraid To Die ‘Hell Is A Place In My Mind’ 12-inch (The Coming Strife)

Bono / Burattini ‘Ora Sono Un Lago’ 12-inch (Maple Death)

Demmers ‘Forced Perspective’ 12-inch (Protagonist)

Dimension ‘Fight Another Day’ 7-inch (Iron Lung)

FRSKE ‘Through The Slow Dusk’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)

Gunner ‘Reality Soldiers’ 7-inch (Iron Lung)

Klonns ‘G.A.M.E.S’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)

No Idols ‘No Idols’ 7-inch (Iron Lung / Restock)

Siyahkal ‘Corrupt’ 12-inch (Static Shock)

The Saddest Landscape ‘Alone With Heaven’ 2x12inch (Iodine)

Total Control ‘Typical System’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)

Total Control ‘Henge Beat’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)

Foundation Vinyl Newsletter

Welcome

Hello and welcome to the latest edition of the Foundation Vinyl newsletter!  I had the pleasure of catching two bands for the first time over the weekend, who I had been very keen to see for a long while now.

On Saturday, I popped along to The Black Heart to see HabakWreathe got things underway, and despite the challenges of a vocalist having lost his voice, a rather unwell drummer, and a stand-in guitarist, they still delivered a sledgehammer of a set.  This was Habak’s first time in London and the crackling atmosphere in the packed room gave a fair hint that I was one of many looking forward to it.  Habak did not disappoint.  Their passionately executed blend of haunting melodic crust and blackened hardcore eruptions went down an absolute storm.

Then on Monday night, JJ And The A’s hit The Shacklewell Arms.  The contrasting pleasures of Keno’s punishing grooves and Grazia’s writhing garage punk primed the evening rather nicely for the rollicking melting pot that is JJ And The A’s.  Cavorting organs, slabs of riffage, and whiplash rhythms were all corralled by an utterly irrepressible, darkly wry vocal performance.  They certainly ensured that the long weekend ended with a gleeful bang rather than a fatigued whimper.

And so, what do we have lined up this week?  We kick off with three brand new releases.  On Vitriol Records, we have the barnstorming return of Sweat with Tear It On Down and then the metallic crust savagery of Annapura with V.  Next, we have the monstrous new EP from Abyecta, Inténtalo O Muere, on Metadona Records – punk-metal done right.

We round things off with two excellent reissues.  First up, also on Vitriol, we have the 10th anniversary edition of the classic third album from Red Dons, The Dead Hand Of Tradition. Then, we head back to the early 1980s as Sealed Records uncover another lost gem with Let’s Mutate by Bikini Mutants.

As always, we have an updated London gig listing, with shows this week from Maraudeur, Ameretat, and Morning Again among others.  Plus, we have  a quick look at some of the great new releases heading our way in coming weeks, including next week’s fine haul that features B.O.R.N., Colegiata, Mother Nature, Sistema De Entretenimiento, and Tiikeri!

Also, just a quick heads up that the Catastrophe and Faucheuse LPs are due to arrive today, so all pre-orders will be shipping out over the next day or two.  We will also have some additional copies in stock, so don’t worry if pre-orders aren’t your thing!

I’ll end with a few words (roughly along the following lines) croaked by Alex CF towards the end of Wreathe’s set on Saturday, as I think they summed up the spirit of the weekend’s shows rather aptly: ‘Being in a band and being neurodivergent isn’t easy.  This isn’t a sob story by the way.  But when you have friends over to play in your city and your body fails you…well, it kills.  If I can be in a band, any one can.  Start your own.  If you can’t play instrument, just pick up a mic and scream like I do’.

Featured New Arrivals

Tear It On Down by Sweat / V by Annapura / Let’s Mutate by Bikini Mutants / The Dead Hand Of Tradition by Red Dons / Inténtalo O Muere by Abyecta (clockwise)

‘Pitting me against you, And us against them, But we won’t take the bait, Can’t give them the satisfaction, Because all we get is smaller cages and shorter chains’ (Smaller Cages, Shorter Chains)

Tear It On Down is an album born of bristling defiance and tentative hope.  At times, it can feel like we have front row seats for the end of days, entrenched interests flailing ever more desperately to protect their power.  This can lure us into being trapped in a perpetual present, susceptible to a despair born of forgetting.  Forgetting how far we have come and how powerful we can be when we act together.  And it is only by remembering this power that we can resist and create a different future.

This is the Los Angeles’ band’s third album and follow up to 2024’s Love Child and their sound continues to be defined by an undying adoration of the riff.  Metallic in their heft, hardcore in their snap yet indelibly imbued with a 1970s’ rock strut and fizzing with garage punk urgency, the onslaught of tautly surging riffage is at the very heart of Tear It On Down.  The fleetingly flaring solos and the limber bounce of the rhythm section further fuel the rock’n’roll swagger, while the rampaging vocals frenetically dissect the need to break free from the self-serving narratives of division and to build our own resilience, both individually and as communities.

The fiercely choppy A New Love Language kicks thing off with an unapologetic bang.  It sets a high-octane tone that doesn’t relent for even a moment as the infectious agitations of Surveillance State and the muscular stomp of Bloostains are deftly intertwined with the impassioned melodicism of Smaller Cages, Shorter Chains and Tension.  What unfurls is a rousing call to wake up and regain our humanity, and our independence of thought, ‘The end of raids, The end of incarceration, The end of indoctrination, Tear it on down’ (Citta Violenta)

AnnapuraV

12 Inch

‘Bienvenida inversión extranjera…Primer mundo, Nos tienen en guerra…¡Robando! Burlándose de las costumbres, Para después venderlas’ (Nuevo Mexico) / ‘Welcome foreign investment…First world, They have us at war…Stealing! Mocking our customs, Only to sell them off later’ (New Mexico)

What is the characteristic that elevates the most compelling hardcore?  For me, it is the intentionality that shapes both why and how it is being played.  Mexico City’s Annapura are a band who literally seethe with it and the band’s fifth release, V (they are, however, not big on titles), is a visceral statement of that intent.

The origins of the band are very much rooted in d-beat fuelled crust, but as they have progressed, another element has come increasingly into play.  It is one that brings to mind mid-2000s’ bands in the vein of say Black Kites and The Separation, who married together influences drawn from the metallic hardcore of the early 1990s with the more chaotic, faster expressions that emerged later in that same decade.  It proves a thoroughly rewarding evolution.

From the desperation drenched opener No Llegó (He Didn’t Arrive) to the bleak melody laced Todo A Todo (Everything To Everything), and then through the bouncing grooves of Espíritu de Fuego (Spirit Of Fire) to the double bass drum propelled tumult of El Desastre (The Disaster), the intensity is remorseless.  Each track is a savage two-minute eruption, before the album closes on the more expansive, darkly atmospheric instrumental Ocaso (Sunset).  Meanwhile, the dual vocals, one gruffly barked, the other more harshly desperate, explore how the colonial economics of globalisation exploit and exacerbate the violence and inequality embedded in daily Mexican life.

‘Es la hor de las bestias, Quién se conoce aqui? En la ciudad de la furia, Te tocas pelear o morir’ (Inténtalo o Muere ) / ‘It’s the hour of the beasts, Who knows anyone here? In the city of fury, it’s fight or die’ (Try It Or Die)

Abyecta return with their third 7-inch, following on from 2022’s Enemigos De La Razon (Enemies Of Reason).  Comprising two tracks – Inténtalo O MuereInténtalo O Muere and Amo Y Esclavo (Master and Slave) – that both come in at around the five-minute mark, it is undoubtedly the duo’s most ambitious release to date.

Originally hailing from Chile and now based largely in the US, the fundamentals of their sound remains a fierce blend of Japanese Burning Spirits hardcore and mid-to-late 1980s’ thrash metal (think more Mustaine than Hanneman).  Which, when you think of the classic heavy metal influences that shaped both, makes for a powerfully organic partnership.

The departure comes in the song writing itself, which sets aside short, sharp hardcore blasts in favour of more expansive structures that evolve through distinct, yet closely interlinked, movements.  The key is that none of this feels self-consciously progressive, or in any way self-indulgent.  Rather, it is playing to the very strengths of the inspirations that Abyecta are so vibrantly reanimating.

Dense yet catchy metallic riffage is underpinned by a rolling, surging rhythm section. The riffs themselves continually morph and reform, evolving without ever losing sight of the original starting point.  I particularly love the melodic bridge that binds together Inténtalo O Muere and the killer melody that forms the cornerstone of Amo Y Esclavo.  Now, I know for many, the riffs will be the main attraction here, but it has to be said that the infectiously rasping, utterly rampant vocals are more than a match as they contemplate the harsh realities of life in Santiago.  It’s an exhilarating ride.

‘Build a monument in marble, In your likeness, In your honour, Will the victories feel hollow, When the sun burns out, Tomorrow’ (Pyrrhic Pyrrhic)

This is the 10th anniversary reissue of Red Dons’ classic third full-length, The Dead Hand Of Tradition.  When it landed a decade ago, its sharply crafted, darkly melodic punk was the sound of a band definitively hitting its stride.  The nimbleness of the song writing inventively braids the album with a myriad of enticing influences.  There is an ever-present shroud of post-punk melancholy, with at differing times a hardcore abrasiveness and a careering garage rock energy, not to mention a certain sing-along pop sensibility, all of which are embraced with equal relish.

The textures this introduces, from the cleverly layered vocal harmonies to the shifting rhythmic patterns and flaring melodic flourishes, imbues their music with a thoroughly satisfying depth.  The highlights land in quick succession from the languid embrace of Remember to the surging melodicism of Pyrrhic Pyrrhic, and then from the catchily scratchy Together Apart to the fiercely seething title track.  Yet, it is an album that works its way into your musical consciousness more as a singular, sweeping expression, such is its satisfying cohesiveness.

Meanwhile, the stridently melodic, almost crooned, cleanly enunciated vocals add another vivid dimension.  They fluently construct a narrative that explores how tradition can, if not harnessed in a positive way, be a deadening hand on our lives, reaching through from the past to shackle the future.  The Dead Hand Of Tradition has proved, at least to date, to be the Portland band’s final full-length.  However, they continue to tour regularly and have released two subsequent EPs, 2017’s Genocide and 2023’s Generations.

Want to get to know the Red Dons? Then, this is a great place to start.

‘There’s nothing left to strive for, Illusions slain by stark reality, Gilded pavements fade to concrete, In the daylight of the city’ (Arcadia)

Bikini Mutants were a relatively short lived early 1980s’ post-punk band from Yeovil, with members going on to play in My Bloody Valentine and The Chesterfields.  Indeed, the five-year labour of love which was involved in pulling this intriguing reissue together was rather longer than the lifespan of the band itself.  However, it was undoubtedly time well spent.

Although Bikini Mutants emerged amid the West Country’s thriving anarcho-punk scene, their sound was distinctively different as they pioneered the blend of wiry post-punk and catchy indie pop that was to become increasingly synonymous with the era.  This twelve-track compilation pulls together the band’s two demos, both of which were recorded in 1982.

The song writing is intricately layered and subtly propulsive. The vocals are delicate yet assertive, frequently operating in a near operatic tenor as they contemplate a bleak future in Thatcherite Britain.  A lo-fi scratchiness characterised the guitar on their debut, but a change in guitarist saw a more fuzzed out style emerge on the second.  My personal highlight, however, is the supple, sprightly swinging interplay between the bass and drums.  The locked-in rhythm of Arcadia from the first demo, and the mournfully shimmering Empty on the second, capture the band’s understated allure perfectly.

The album is accompanied by a fascinating twenty-page booklet that assembles the lyrics, various gig reviews, and a fanzine interview, together with plenty of photos and flyers.  It also includes three typically soulless A&R rejection letters, which – if nothing else – serve as a useful reminder of why we needed DIY in the first place.

Shows And Tours

Ameretat / Old Blue Last / Saturday 11th April

Soga / New River Studios / Saturday 13th June

April

7th  Strike Anywhere, Iron Roses, Low Press, CF98 (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)

8th  The Eurosuite, Maraudeur, Talking Chairs (New River Studios / Maraudeur UK Tour)

9th  Riki, Ghost Cop, Zeropolis (Hootananny)

9th  The Yacht Club, Tethered, Fuzzy Heart, Fly Fly Triceratops (The Victoria)

9th  Slowhole, Moloch plus more (The Black Heart)

11th  Ameretat, Ikhras, Dead Name, Crude Image (Old Blue Last)

11th  Chalk Hands, Death Of Youth, Hempitera (Piehouse Co-Op)

12th  Morning Again, Killing Me Softly, Afraid To Die (The Black Heart)

12th  Full Of Hell, The Body, Jarhead Fertilizer, Jad  (The Scala / UK Tour)

15th  MIA, Bleakness, Last Affront, One By One (New River Studios / Bleakness UK Tour)

15th  Primitive Man, Kollaps, Sea Bastard (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)

17th  Earth Ball, CIA Debutante, Split Apex (Cafe Oto / UK Tour)

17th  Crazy Spirit, Rat Cage , Morrreadoras, Low And Behold (New River Studios)

18th  KaleidoscopeLameShakti, StingraySecond Death (New River Studios)

18th  The Restarts, Śmierć, Haavat (New Cross Inn)

19th  Faze plus support (The Shacklewell Arms / UK Tour)

20th   Orcutt Shelley Miller, Earth Ball (Cafe Oto / Sold Out)

22nd   Speed, Whispers, Bodyweb (Electric Ballroom)

24th   Kowloon Walled City plus support (The Black Heart)

25th   Sick Thoughts, Gold Cup plus more (The Shacklewell Arms)

30th   Powerplant plus support (Oslo)

May

9th   Bad Breeding, Klonns, Zenocide, The East Eights, Secrecy (Blondies Brewery)

9th   Higher Walls, Black Mould, Empty Threat (Blondies Bar)

13th   Artificial Go, No Peeling plus support (New River Studios)

15th-17th  Desertfest featuring Deaf Club, Harrowed, Moloch and many more (Various Venues, Camden / Deaf Club UK Tour)

16th  Morrow, Copse, Jøtnarr, Gilded Cage (New Cross Inn)

20th  Prisão, Knome, Lost Cause, Catastrophe (New River Studios)

21st  Zanjeer, Snake Easter, Ikhras, Mashaal, Rat’s Breath (New River Studios)

24th Tiikeri plus support (New River Studios / UK Tour)

28th  Screensaver plus support (The Shacklewell Arms)

29th  Ayucaba plus support (New River Studios / UK Tour)

29th  Sex Germs, Ruined Virtue, Most Crevice, Crude Image, Gutter Carrion, MB93 (Old Blue Last)

29th  Algae Bloom, Cold Holding, incaseyouleave, I’m Sorry Emil, Closed Hands (New Cross Inn)

30th  Texas Is The Reason plus support (Islington Assembly Hall / UK Tour)

June

2nd  Merzbow with Cavalera and Bernocchi, Microcorps  (Iklectik / Sold Out)

3rd  Merzbow, Nina Garcia (Iklectik / Sold Out)

5th  Acid Reign plus support (The Underworld / UK Tour)

7th  Merzbow, Elvin Brandhi (Iklectik)

13th  Soga, Gimic, Leashed. Gross Misconduct (New River Studios / UK Tour)

13th  Oi Polloi, Rank, Contract Killer, Wind Of Knives, Dinosaur Skull (New Cross Inn)

20th  Knuckledust, Stampin’ Ground, Grove Street, 50 Caliber, Born From Pain, Tempers Fray (The Underworld / Sold Out)

20th  Nuovo Testamento plus support (Oslo)

23rd  Agriculture, Healing Wound plus more (Bush Hall)

25th  Contention, Clique plus more (New Cross Inn)

July

5th  Stress Positions plus support (New Cross Inn)

9th  Tethered, Brach, Every Face Becomes A Skull (Calamity Tank)

9th  Shai Hulud, Afraid To Die plus more (New Cross Inn)

10th-11th  Mongrel Fest featuring The Chisel, Imposter, Last Affront, Scab, The Social, T.S. Warspite plus many more (Venue tbc)

10th  Agnostic Front, D.R.I., Under The Influence (The Underworld)

23rd  Racetraitor, Hour Of Reprisal plus more (New Cross Inn)

September

19th  Spy, Spaced, Dry Socket (The Underworld / UK Tour)

October

17th  Avskum, Earth To Dust plus more (New Cross Inn)

November

19th  The Hope Conspiracy plus support (The Underworld

Coming Soon

Language Of A Peaceful Mind by Mother Nature

Punk Rock Pamaus!!! by Tiikeri

April 8th

Catastrophe ‘Cries From The Gutter’ 12-inch (Symphony Of Destruction)

Faucheuse ‘Comme Un Poignard’ 12-inch (Symphony Of Destruction)

Yunk ‘Yunk’ 7-inch (Symphony Of Destruction / Restock)

April 14th

B.O.R.N. ‘B.O.R.N.’ 12-inch (Self-released)

Colegiata ‘Colegiata‘ 12-inch (Flexidiscos)

Mother Nature ‘Language Of A Peaceful Mind’ 7-inch (Donor)

Sistema De Entretenimiento ‘300 Noches Sin Dormir’ 12-inch (Flexidiscos)

Tiikeri ‘Punk Rock Pamaus!!!’ 12-inch (Flexidiscos)

April 21st

Enyor ‘Sola D’Espart’ 12-inch (Mendeku Diskak)

Ficcion ‘Esclavos De Internet’ 12-inch (No Front Teeth)

Spiritual Law ‘Spiritual Law’ 12-inch (Discos Enfermos)

Spont Ar Stad ‘Spont Ar Stad’ 12-inch (Discos Enfermos)

Traumatizer ‘Nuclear War Machine’ 7-inch (Discos Enfermos / Restock)

Later In April

Afraid To Die ‘Hell Is A Place In My Mind’ 12-inch (The Coming Atrife)

Bono / Burattini ‘Ora Sono Un Lago’ 12-inch (Maple Death)

Dog Chocolate ‘So Inspired, So Done In’ 12-inch (Upset The Rhythm)

Nohz ‘Slumber Between Rotten Walls’ 12-inch (Kick Rock)

Plastic Tones ‘Can You Keep A Secret?’ 12-inch (Kick Rock)

Stabber ‘II’ 7-inch (Kick Rock)

May

Bloody Head ‘Bend Down And Kiss The Ground’ 12-inch (Wrong Speed)

Demmers ‘Forced Perspective’ 12-inch (Protagonist)

Dimension ‘Fight Another Day’ 7-inch (Iron Lung)

FRSKE ‘Through The Slow Dusk’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)

Gunner ‘Reality Soldiers’ 7-inch (Iron Lung)

Hey Colosssus ‘Heaven Was Wild’ 12-inch (Wrong Speed)

Irked ‘The Grievance’ 12-inch (Wrong Speed)

Klonns ‘G.A.M.E.S’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)

Siyahkal ‘Corrupt’ 12-inch (Static Shock)

The Saddest Landscape ‘Alone With Heaven’ 2x12inch (Iodine)

Pagination

Subscribe

If you would like to receive our weekly newsletter, with all the latest release news, please sign up below.