STIFF RICHARDS

STIFF RICHARDS

Stiff Richards

(Melbourne, Australia // Legless Records)

 Possibly the gnarliest thing to come out of Rye since ergot poisoning: Stiff Richards.

Straight out of the shed into your head, it’s riff-ready, pugilistic punk rock. Scorching licks, no bullshit tricks. Skin-prickling, face-melting, teeth-gritting, savage rock ’n’ roll. Three records deep on Legless, Stiff Richards is a State Of Mind. Five super garage punks, invoking all the slippery pit ghosts that came before them. Blasting the spiders from the rotting rafters, these vibrations will elicit sensations from Australia to Belgium.

DEATH VALLEY GIRLS

DEATH VALLEY GIRLS

Death Valley Girls

(Los Angeles, USA /// Suicide Squeeze Records)

For the better part of a decade, LA’s scrappy rock n’ roll mystics Death Valley Girls have used their music as a means of tapping into a communal cosmic energy. On albums like Glow In The Dark (2016), Darkness Rains (2018), and Under the Spell of Joy (2020) the band challenged the soul-crushing banality of modern society and celebrated “true magical infinite potential” through a collage of scorching proto-punk riffs, earworm melodies, far-out lyrics, and lysergic auxiliary instrumentation. But on their latest album Islands in the Sky, Death Valley Girls’ songwriting mastermind Bonnie Bloomgarden uses the band’s anthemic revelries as a guidebook to spiritual healing and a roadmap for future incarnations of the self. And while these may be the loftiest aims of Death Valley Girls to date, the resulting music is also by far their most infectious and celebratory.

The seeds for Islands in the Sky were planted while Bloomgarden was bed-ridden with a mysterious illness from November 2020 to March 2021. “When I was sick I had to sleep most of the day. I kept waking up every few hours with an intense message to take care of the island, feed the island…I have no idea why, but making music for the island kept coming up.”

Before her illness, Bloomgarden’s primary focus was writing songs to help other people deal with their own suffering. But something in her shifted, and she began to turn her focus inward. “When I was sick I started to wonder if it would be possible to write a record with messages of love to my future self. This was really the first time that I consciously thought about my own suffering and what future me might need to hear to heal. I struggled so much in my life with mental health, abuse, PTSD, and feeling like I didn’t belong anywhere. And I don’t want anyone—including my future self—to suffer ever again. I realized that if we are all part of one cosmic consciousness, as we [Death Valley Girls] believe, then Islands in the Sky could serve not only as a message of love and acceptance to myself, but also from every self to every self, because we are all one!”

If this sounds too cerebral or esoteric, don’t worry. At its core, Islands in the Sky is a party—a riotous, danceable, sing-a-long celebration of life, love, and mystery. The bulk of the album was channeled into being when Bloomgarden and drummer Rikki Styxx went out to a cabin in the California woods on New Years Day 2022 to hunker down and harness the songs from the ether. Further bolstered by Larry Schemel’s guitar prowess and the addition of new bassist and co-lead singer Sammy Westervelt, Death Valley Girls set out to make their most ambitious and exciting record to date at Station House
Studio in Echo Park.

Islands in the Sky opens with a patient, hazy, aura fueled synth, organ, and Schemel’s dusty guitar twang on “California Mountain Shake”—a love song to our future selves, as evidenced in the song’s confession “I’m still in love with you.” The slow-burn yields to “Magic Powers,” where Death Valley Girls teach us how to harness the hard times, abuse, and feelings of being alone, abandoned, or powerless in your life into magic powers, all while channeling the pomp and swagger of ‘90s big-budget rockers like Elastica and Garbage. This segues into the title track, an anthem fully deserving of having an entire album share its name. Imagine Rush’s “Freewill” without the math but with an even more triumphant chorus and an openness to otherworldly possibilities. From there we have “Sunday,” which uses the swirling organ, soulful vocals, emotional bombast, and the hip-shaking climax of a classic Percy Sledge tune as a foundation to Bloomgarden’s lyrical examination of coping with the struggles of her past. Still not a convert? Just one spin of “What Are the Odds” and you’ll be singing along with the chorus of “we are living in a simulated world, and we are simulated girls.”

On side B, the self-empowerment song-talisman of “When I’m Free” makes a reappearance after initially showing up in late 2021 on a split 7” with Le Butcherettes and getting a scorching remix treatment from Peaches in early 2022. The fall 2021 digital single “It’s All Really Kind of Amazing” closes out the album, serving as a reminder that all the answers to all the secrets are already inside you. Fittingly, Bloomgarden states that the soaring finale to Islands in the Sky “was fully 100% channeled from my guides to remind me even when everything seems shitty in the world, and it doesn’t seem fair to be happy about anything, the earth and the universe are still really amazing.”

Suicide Squeeze is proud to release Death Valley Girls’ Islands in the Sky to the world on vinyl, CD, cassette, and DSPs in early 2023.

 

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HOOVER III

HOOVER III

Hoover III

(Los Angeles, USA // The Reverberation Appreciation Society Records / Levitation Records) 

West-coast fever dream denizens Hooveriii have been cracking the cosmic egg for years now, slowly amassing a catalog of releases scrawled with garage, glam, psych-pop and prog. Initially started as the solo guise of Bert Hoover (Jesus Sons, Mind Meld, GROOP), the band has evolved into an enigmatic magnet for L.A. heads and likeminded wanderers as their ranks have swelled and releases grew from bedroom burners to widescreen wonders.  Carving their way out of a long tour following the release of their last album, Pointe, the band was instantly ready to return to the task of new material. Self-imposing a tight timeframe, the band wrote the bulk of the new record in in a month and entered John Dwyer’s short-lived, but much loved, psych-punk pressure cooker Discount Mirrors with Eric Bauer at the controls. Making full use of Bauer’s prowess with big, bilious guitars, the resulting Manhunter is one of the band’s most massive records yet.   

 

With Bauer behind the boards, the goal was to grow the album’s sound to massive proportions; a record ripped on guitars and fed on amplifier fumes. Not that the band’s light on riffs in their catalog, but here, each song growls with an instinctual catharsis. The tighter turnaround added to a more prominent sense of urgency and an ozone-fried tension in the air. That tension turns the album darker.  Fueled by a time of personal upheaval for Hoover, the record’s themes ruminate on discomfort and unease. The darkness smelts with a surreal paranoia that seeps in from van rides and hotel hole-ups spent ingesting dark alleys and double crosses in the films of Michael Mann and William Freidkin. The album’s title nods to Mann’s Manhunter, a film that informed the record’s live wire air and creeping dread. Like their cinematic counterparts, more than a few tracks skid around corners with a look over their shoulder — wild-eyed, popped vein rockers sipping adrenaline by the ounce.

 

True to Hooveriii’s history, the assembled crew have already evolved, but left here in the blast shadow of the session the listener can hear them at their most hackled. Hoover and Matthew Zuk’s guitars have been mutated to monstrous heights by Bauer. Paco Casanova’s synths slither through darkened corners, coiled with menace, and Modaff and Mirblouk anchor the record with the constant crush of rhythm. The band even brings in Sheer Mag’s Kyle Seely to kick the heat and sear a solo on “Heaven At The Gates.” At its core Manhunter devours the speakers, breathless and bitten, but as it skids to a close on the penultimate track, “Godawful Planet,” the band takes a moment of reflection after the caffeinated careen of the last thirteen tracks. The record was written long before the societal walls were as close to crushing as they are now, but even then, the writing on them was apparent. “It’s some God awful planet, “sings Hoover, “I can’t stay.” Truer words, as they say. But, for now, Manhunter’s here to give you a stick to bite on during the dire times. We’re gonna need it. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rnqKJrgcCtU

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4AG4cBJm2sM

 

 

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LEFT LANE CRUISER

LEFT LANE CRUISER

Left Lane Cruiser

(Fort Wayne, USA /// Alive Naturalsound Records)

“Bayport BBQ Blues” is the new studio album by Indiana’s favorite blues duo Left Lane Cruiser, featuring Freddy J IV
on guitar and vocals, and Brenn “Sausage Paw” Beck on drums, washboard and trash kit. The album blends Freddy’s
commanding, gritty vocal rasp and positively nasty hoodoo slide guitar work with Sausage Paw’s rhythmic stomp to
make for a heady fire-starter for your house party, backyard barbecue or juke joint get-down. “Bayport BBQ Blues” is
dedicated to the memory of the late Chris Jonson, creator of the Deep Blues Festival.


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OPINION

OPINION

OPINION

(Bordeaux, France // Howlin’ Banana Records, Flippin’ Freaks, Les Disques Du Paradis, Nothing Is Mine Records)

Sur le tout premier album d’Opinion paru en 2016, Hugo Carmouze chantait pour les gens dans sa tête. De nombreux héros garage, punk, psyché, noise qui avaient contribué à faire jaillir une musique électrique et incandescente dont on avait bien du mal à imaginer qu’elle était alors enregistrée par un adolescent de 14 ans à peine dans le fin fond de la campagne française. En quasiment une décennie, la musique d’Opinion a subi plusieurs mutations toujours guidées par la folie créatrice de Carmouze, capable d’enchaîner triples albums, chansons folk, collaborations choisies, side-projects harsh-noise ou black metal.

La scène lui aura peut-être donné un cadre, Opinion devenant un groupe en concert après sa rencontre avec le label bordelais Flippin’ Freaks. Capable de composer et d’enregistrer un album en une nuit si ça lui chante, Hugo Carmouze aime à jouer avec les contraintes et surtout les règles de bienséances de studio. Il a nommé ce douzième album, le “Troisième Opinion” pour capturer l’entrée dans une nouvelle période de sa vie et de son approche musicale, après l’enfance et l’adolescence. A cette occasion, il a choisi de prendre son temps et d’explorer des sonorités jusqu’ici rares dans sa musique, sans se préoccuper nécessairement de pouvoir les rejouer en live. Ce disque, sans perdre la spontanéité et les tressauts punk de la signature sonore de Carmouze, a des petits airs d’éternité. Des morceaux souvent plus épurés qui délaissent la confrontation pour un caractère lumineux, une intimité plus franchement assumée. Ce Troisième Opinion est aussi l’occasion pour le songwriter de se libérer définitivement des ombres de ses pères spirituels pour parvenir à un son personnel, homogène dont l’équilibre guitare-voix est immédiatement reconnaissable. 

C’est aussi un album “produit” au sens où on l’aurait dit dans les années 1960 et 1970, aux arrangements souvent audacieux. Opinion s’y dévoile comme un projet rock intemporel capable de lier une véritable science mélodique (la discographie riche de Carmouze comme école du songwriting), une quête sonore et une façon d’aborder la production par une approche libre et empirique. Un petit chat avec sa rythmique doom, ses guitares kraut, et sa ligne de chant douce-amère ressemble à une comptine déviante et terriblement attachante. 19 rappelle à notre bon souvenir la capacité d’Hugo Carmouze à écrire des hooks accrocheurs. Sa voix s’y balade sans peine comme si le chemin le plus court entre pop 60’s, garage et shoegaze était aussi le plus naturel. Microrange et ses airs d’instant classic noisy pop est un autre morceau de bravoure du disque.

La question n’est plus vraiment de savoir si ce disque est mature et accessible. Il offre une vision embarquée d’un des projets rock les plus emballants de ces dernières années qui atteint ici son plein régime. 

Opinion is the pseudonym under which Hugo Carmouze chose to release his solo albums at the age of 13, marking the ordinary chapter of a garage rock fan born into the internet generation… Well, not quite, as the young Occitan has never stopped producing an impressive number of albums since, reminiscent of his great master Ty Segall. Recorded in his room with rudimentary equipment, Opinion’s albums quickly found resonance in the French scene and the Flippin’ Freaks label, combining seriousness, hyperactivity, and great creativity. In nearly a decade, Opinion’s music has undergone multiple transformations, always driven by Carmouze’s creative madness, capable of producing triple albums, folk songs, selective collaborations, and side projects in harsh noise or black metal.

At the dawn of his 18th year, the musician settled in Bordeaux and released his seventh album under the name Opinion. « Molly » (2020), a monumental double album that explores themes of solitude and passionate love. The album received a very enthusiastic critical reception. While the energy and inspiration from the Californian garage scene continue to be a significant foundation of his music, Opinion unfolds in a diverse range of influences, showcasing an emotional sensitivity reminiscent of Kurt Cobain or Elliott Smith. Accompanied since 2020 by some offspring of the Bordeaux label Flippin’ Freaks, Opinion quickly turned the stage into a playground as exciting as the studio. Performances are intense, oscillating between noisy urgency and disconcerting fragility. 


After numerous concerts and a handful of albums and EPs released online, Opinion announces 2 highly anticipated new physical albums for 2024.

-“Horrible”, recorded on the night of December 31st to January 1st, 2023, is an album influenced by American slacker and shoegaze. Released on February 23rd, 2024 on Flippin’ Freaks Records, Les Disques du Paradis, and Nothing Is Mine Records.

-And “Troisième Opinion”, his twelfth album recorded between 2020 and 2024, will be released on December 6, 2024 on Howlin’ Banana Records, Flippin’ Freaks Records, Les Disques du Paradis, and Nothing Is Mine Records.

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