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Footballhead

Weight Of The Truth

It would be easy to pigeonhole Footballhead’s unapologetically-buttrock-inspired record 'Weight of The Truth' as simple nostalgia bait. Why wouldn’t millennials lust for the days of Halo and energy drinks in carpeted basements they’re not convinced they’ll ever be able to afford for themselves? Beyond that, why would the zoomers that now intently follow not try and chase the high of hyperreality in a bygone world that looks, to them, downright utopian when compared to the present? What sets Footballhead’s capital-R Rock sound apart from contemporaries is - in addition to just sounding better - a desire and an ability to thread the needle between paying homage to a quasi-idyllic past and pursuing an earnest future. Footballhead wears their 2000s-era influences on their waffle-knit longsleeves, with power chord drives and pummeling choruses, all sequenced together like the teeth of a skeleton key able to unlock core memories for people who’ve either been there or people who simply wonder what being there was like. Both the anthems and ballads on 'Weight of The Truth' are waxed and polished to perfection like the lip of a favored skatepark ledge. But underlying all that, even more impressively, is a grit and substance derived from years spent in the Chicago DIY scene, exposing themselves to different styles and influences equally out of necessity as out of interest. It bleeds through on every track. You can bullshit your way into a vibe but, as the band shows on any number of recent releases, including singles off their upcoming second LP: you can’t fake heart. With an ear to the past but an eye to the present, Footballhead invites you to remember what it meant to give a shit back when the world felt simpler - and what it might feel like to do so again.

TRACK LISTING

1. Peace of Mind
2. Used To Be
3. Diversion
4. Weight of The Truth
5. Hesitate
6. You're Not Making Sense
7. Fall Away
8. Comforting
9. Death To A Past Life
10. Chosen Brother
11. What You're Whispering
12. Focus

Spirit Of The Beehive

Hypnic Jerks

As the Spirit of the Beehive front man Zack Schwartz puts it, 'Hypnic Jerks' sounds like the state between wakefulness and sleep. The Philly quintet's third full length is named after the involuntary muscle spasms that can happen right as someone begins dozing off ... a perfect feeling to compare the album's drowsy-yet- restless character to.

Unlike the spiraling momentum of the band's sophomore LP, 'Pleasure Suck', the Spirit of the Beehive takes a more grounded approach here, though the ground it's standing on is equally otherworldly. Dreamy is a fitting adjective, but the ten tracks on 'Hypnic Jerks' never fully slip into the peaceful character of dream-pop. 'Hypnic Jerks' has the quality of an indescribable dream fading from memory as you slowly begin to regain consciousness. Its warped guitar tones, transcendental synths and smattering of eerie audio samples conjure this purgatorial space between reverie and reality. It's an arena where the songs unexpectedly contort themselves and take on different textures, morphing in and out of one another. Once the celestial harmonies, balmy keys and creeping false climax of album closer it's gonna find you roll past, it's clear that the spirit of the beehive has secured a seat at this decade's table of musical visionaries.

TRACK LISTING

1. Nail I Couldn't Bite
2. Mantra Is Repeated
3. Fell Asleep With A Vision
4. Can I Receive The Contact?
5. Poly Swim
6. D.o.u.b.l.e.u.r.o.n.g.
7. (Without You) In My Pocket
8. Hypnic Jerks
9. Monumental Shame
10. It's Gonna Find You

Awakebutstillinbed

What People Call Low Self-esteem Is Really Just Seeing Yourself The Way That Other People See You

For bands in San Jose, existence itself is a political act. With almost no venues at their disposal, and a culture dictated by billion dollar corporations, passion is the only option. Formed in 2017, Awakebutstillinbed emerge from this environment screaming out for connection and meaning, their music a vivid rendering of a life spent standing on a precipice (Pitchfork). Absibs debut 'What People Call Low Self-Esteem Is Just Seeing Yourself The Way Others See You' is an album about being crushed by expectations, and loaded with other peoples desires. It is untamable, and undeniable. What began as the solo project of singer/guitarist Shannon Taylor, Absib are now a powerful group, part At the Drive-In, part Kim Shattuck, and (at times) part pre-Good News Modest Mouse. Explosive and honest, Taylors lyrics painfully, purposefully tear out the false seams and sutures that shape us in the eyes of others, revealing underneath the beautiful, beating heart if whatever it is we call the self. On paper, it might sound like familiar territory for emo, but don't be fooled: Absib map out whole areas of the soul previously pushed to the shadows. Plus, they fucking rock.

TRACK LISTING

1. Opener
2. Life
3. Safe
4. Stumble
5. Fathers
6. Interlude
7. Saved
8. Floor
9. Closer


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