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Tuesday, 13 May 2025

Press Club - To All The Ones That I Love

 


I was thinking that it would be nice to have something noisy to sort of rattle the dentures whilst still being melodic instead of a sound that spouted pure anger. Lo and Behold, Brunswick, Australia's Press Club have arrived with their fourth album after a three year gap to provide just that.

They certainly get noisy on the likes of Tightrope and No Pressure, wonderfully so, without ever losing the plot or losing the magnificence of those ace gripping Riffs. Wilt for instance is built around a jangling riff that wouldn't be out of place in the 80s.



I suppose you might call the band Indie Rock, but that wouldn't be the half of it. There's plenty here to interest Punk, Power Pop, Noise Rock and Alt Rock fans. The solos are awesome mixing Classic Rock and 90s Rock and they enhance the songs.

Don't expect Press Club to come up for air, these songs are built around a cracking rhythm section that grounds the sound and allows the guitar and vocal to go in whatever direction they choose and boy, do they. This is an absolutely gripping album.



Vacate starts like something from a 1981 Post Punk band with a vocal that is a little Feargal Sharkey, but then it launches into a magnificent twang led affair. The title track is pure pace, but based on a riff that is part Johnny Marr and part Psych Pop.

Staring At The Ceiling is almost a Pop song and certainly the most accessible, it is anthemic. Desolation is a cracking closer, almost Garbage instrumentally and again offering up an all together now vibe. You can imagine this lot being at their best Live. I can't wait to see them over here in July. To All The Ones I Love is a corking listen, absolutely Top Notch.



You can listen to and buy the album here. It is available on Vinyl, CD and as a download.


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The Spindles - Wavelength

 


What we discover or is submitted does seem to come in waves. Lately, it seems to be 90s Rock, 80s New Wave or Pop Punk. Pop Rock has been fairly low key and when you hear an album as good as this, you wonder why.

Chicago's The Spindles have delivered an album of real quality that warrants listening to from start to finish, because the quality never wavers. Built on big choruses, bigger riffs. wonderful melodic arrangements and generally catch all songs.



It does sound a little 70s at times, but that's no problem, it was probably the glory days of the genre. More than that though, this is a real guitarathon. There's also no fear of stepping away from the norm. For instance, Two Sides To Every Story is prime time Rockville.

Ride My Bike steps into Classic Rock Territory and I Found A Girl is splendid jangling Power Pop of the highest order. Ballads are at a premium, but the closer, Best Of Everything, is built around a killer riff and very nearly steals the show.



If I had one slight criticism it is that the album is a bit cover heavy with 4 of the 14 sons not being originals. With the sheer quality of the originals, going with 10 songs may have suited me more. Bus Stop, for instance, is a classic, but being the second song in takes away the quality of the self written joy. Having said that, the cover of Rob Elvis's Rock For It is magnificent.

Wavelength is an album that knows what it is about and goes off and masters it. There is real quality in the arrangements and the production. It is a melodic masterpiece and more than demonstrates the strength of great Pop Rock.



You can listen to and buy the album here. You can buy the CD from Kool Kat here.


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Monday, 12 May 2025

Listening To This Week Playlist



Welcome to the new Listening To This Week Playlist. 22 songs this week and it is a cracker. As well as the traditional version, we have put the playlist on Spotify and you will see the link below. Remember this is early days on Spotify, so the following there is nowhere near our one here.

The weekly playlist is largely for submissions, not just the usual stuff that we dig out ourselves. The song order is not about song preference, but how the playlist flows.  All embeds open in new windows to aid scrolling. Links to the artists will also appear on I Don't Hear A Single Social Media sites over the next 24 hours. This will help you to discover more about the artists who appear here. 



The Spotify Version    (The Shake Ups song is not on Spotify)




The Supernaturals - Killed By Submarines




Canadian Invasion - Picture Frames




The Confusions - Holding On




Sona Bliss - Just Wanna Be Free




Professor Hollman - Two Alone




The Genuine Fakes - Unhand Me




Smackbeat - You And Me




Tom Minor - The Manic Phase




The Convenience - Target Offer




Frankie And The Witch Fingers - Dead Silence




Eilish Constance - Long Distance Train




RedLight - As Always




Stig & Theo - The Witness




The House Of Jed - O Caligula




Cymbient - Gotta Get Out




Aviv Gros-Allon - I'm A Nomad Jew




The Corrupted Hearts - Broken Slinky




The Crystal Teardrop - Into The Unknown




keepsake - Battlebots




Gabe Ziro - Outer Space




The Shake Ups - In Cartoon Motion (Not On Spotify)




Smalts - B B Told You So




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Thursday, 8 May 2025

The Supernaturals - Show Tunes



Our favourite Glaswegians are back and of course we are more than interested, The Supernaturals have never been afraid to experiment, but Show Tunes finds them back in the genre of their Heyday and you are reminded of what a great Pop Rock band they are.

The trailing singles Roy Wouldn't and Burn The Witch warned us of what we were in for. The former is Power Pop Gold, dripping with James McColl's wit and the latter takes us back to the glory days of Brit Pop which I still think is yesterday, not 30 years ago.




At times the vocal gold that McColl sounds a tad more mellow, but he can still belt it out, especially on the splendid If You Can't Love Yourself which sounds a little 70s. Killed By Submarines is up there with the best things they have released to the world.

The Dread comes close to it, much slower but beautifully arranged, wonderfully haunting yet providing a real optimistic vibe. We Were On Fire is incredibly jaunty and Of Human Bondage is mellow until it bursts into 70s Piano Pop, another highlight.




The main Ballad, Clockwork Orange, is outstanding, a co write with long time Anything Should Happen friend and guitarist Joe Greatorex. Show Tunes is a fine example of how uplifting, well written Pop Rock can make you forget about all the dirge that surrounds us politically.

McColl, lyrically, is on the top of his game and the five piece link perfectly. The CD and Vinyl are on the excellent Late Night From Glasgow label which seems a marriage made in heaven. Any album from this lot is worth attention, but Show Tunes is particularly worth the effort. You even get to hear James McColl's hidden Brass expertise.




You can buy the Vinyl and CD from here. You can listen to and buy the download here. (I was struggling to pick which three tracks to embed, so I've sneaked a fourth below.


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Tuesday, 6 May 2025

Slow Buildings - Crash Landings, Coincidences, Chaos.


This is a splendid album and I feel a bit guilty taking so long to get round to it. With being late to it, I thought I would have a look around at what others were saying about it and that is when my frustration with the general state of reviewing kicked in.

Most reviews were cut and paste of what Jason had already written on the Bandcamp page. It is an album about the ups and downs, largely downs, of the past couple of years and that also invited amateur psychology. I was left thinking "What About The Music?" because this is what reviewing should be about and this album is really really good.






So let me tell you. This is great Pop Rock with the emphasis on melodic Indie Guitar Rock that is equally at home in IRS land as it is when it goes Psych Pop or Jangle Pop. It is beautifully arranged and performed, built on big chorusses, memorable riffs and some great playing.

The subjects are tackled in a fine lyrically adept way, yet the seriousness of the subject doesn't make this a woe is me affair and that is partly because of the quality and sheer catchiness of the arrangement. From the chiming opener, Red Flag Surrender and all its jangly pace to the wonderful jaunty closer, Drained, which may be the catchiest thing here, all 12 songs resonate.




In choosing 3 songs to embed, I could choose any and be delighted. Cruel Girls Are Wrong is built around a killer Psych Pop Riff, Insane Fucker is very early R.E.M. built around an 80s Indie Riff, Lightning Zwelhander sounds like something out of Glasgow in 1989.

Sweet n Sour Luv instrumentally sounds like something from 90s darlings Space, but the vibe is very 60s UK Beat. Slow Buildings is New Jeresy's Jason Legacy and although this is his 7th album, it sounds as fresh as a debut. Wall to Wall excellence!





You can listen to and buy the album here. It cries out for a physical release.


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The Convenience - Like Cartoon Vampires


 

You never really think of New Orleans as a hotbed of Intelligent Angular Indie, but duo Nick Corson and Duncan Troast have fashioned up an album that reminds you of the best of that genre at times. I'm thinking of the likes of early XTC, The Sugarplastic, Franz Ferdinand et al.

The arrangements are incredibly unexpected and inventive, so unusual that they can tread into the footsteps of Elephant Talk King Crimson or melodic post punk. Dominated by exceptional hypnotic riffs that mesmerise at times without ever losing sight of the song.



This is in an area that we were noted for in the Anything Should Happen days, less so on IDHAS, but that may because so few attempt this at the moment, so when they do, it sounds very special indeed and Like Cartoon Vampires certainly excited.

Riffs suddenly change direction or unexpected diversions join in, the whole album is inspired and a cracking listen for those who appreciate more than crashing chords. There are reminders of others too, Pray'r sounds very latter day Radiohead for instance.



Cafe Style is a short 2 minute instrumental that gets a little Psych, but is prime time Drums And Wires. Western Pepsi Cola Town even gets close to a Guitar Pop song, adding unexpected pace, sounding like a more expansive version of The Strokes. Vanity Shapes is wonderfully melodic and restrained.

The Convenience may have saved the best until last. Surrounded by a selection of shorter songs, they come up with a sprawling 10 and a half minutes on Fake The Feeling which is an absolute Prog masterpiece, astounding considering what it accompanies here and a perfect way to end a splendid album.



You can listen to and buy the album here. It is available, on Vinyl, CD, Cassette and as a download.


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Monday, 5 May 2025

Skittish - Ugly Makes Pretty EP

 


You are about to read words describing what will possibly be the best EP of 2025. This and some upcoming stuff that has yet to be released will reveal what rude health Indie Pop is currently in. There's also a cautionary tale for both reviewer and artist here.

I was initially sent a song for the Listening To This Week Playlist which I thought was a little mellow for it. I was wrong and would have discovered so if I had listened to it a bit more. But with so many weekly submissions for a 25 song playlist, decisions can be too quick.

Rather than going off feeling down or, as some do, telling me how wrong I was, I got a reply saying I think this song may suit your place more. That song was Kicking In and it opened last week's LTTW playlist. I wanted to listen to more and bizarrely discovered that I had reviewed the Skittish album from 2023 here. Blame my aging memory, but to be fair, I do listen to more music than I should do.



These five songs are all different. Again the male / female vocal split works wonderfully. The latter provides a more Pop feel, at times a little more commercial. There is also a bigger Electric Guitar vibe to the EP than previously, particularly on the songs sung by Jeff Noller.

Kicking In remains a wonderful listen. Beautifully arranged that sort of marches as it builds and builds, it is an absolute joy. Piece Of Heaven is much rockier and pacy, instrumentally a little Housemartins with a better arrangement, less simplistic than they would offer up. It is a reminder of those glorious Indie Guitar Pop days of the second half of the 80s.



Present Tense is more brooding, kind of epic, with a wonderful Brass arrangement. Mother Nature is a more straight ahead ballad, more Modern Melodic Pop built around Piano and Organ and yet still splendidly arranged.

My Day Of Revenge is built a mesmerising keyboard riff that is a little Toytown, but just wait for the poptastic chorus. Sassy and again beautifully arranged and written. Five great songs that sort of reinvigorate your faith in the magic that music brings into your life.



You can listen to and buy the EP here. You really really should give it a go.


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Muck And The Mires - Beat Revolution

 


Boston quartet, Muck And The Mires, have a reputation as a great Garage Rock band and to some extent, that is a little unfair, giving you an impression that they are noisy and lo-fi and they are neither. They are incredibly melodic and know what they are about. They can also play.

On approaching this review, I also came in from the wrong angle. After constantly being down a rabbit hole hole here, pulled into a variety of genres, I thought it would be refreshing to hear something more guitar led and straight ahead. There is nothing straight ahead about this lot and boy, can they play.



They can do it all without ever resorting to a ballad. At times, they can be a slightly noisier Merseybeat, but are equally adept at UK Beat. They can sound like something on the Stiff label and very UK New Wave, but they are equally comfortable with Rhythm And Blues.

They can edge into Power Pop and yet show the Indie Rock bands of today how to do things properly. They also do Jangle Pop really well. There is nothing meat and potatoes about the band, they are melodic, offer up killer riffs and memorable choruses.



You might think them Retro, but what is left to do that isn't such? Lemon And Lime is almost Surf, The World's Gone Mad crosses Beat with Psych Pop. She's Too Good For You is very Medway, but has a wonderful Jangle about it. 

Mary Ann Man is great US 60s Garage Rock, yet You Can't Try It (Before You Buy it) is a wonderful all together now with more excellent Jangle Pop. I also love the wit in reprising the opener, Beat Revolution, as Beat Revolution 9. There is much to like admire in a band that are versatile, but know how to get you moving. Great Stuff!



You can listen to and buy the album here. It is available on Vinyl, CD or as a download.


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Sunday, 4 May 2025

Listening To This Week Playlist



Welcome to the new Listening To This Week Playlist. 31 songs this week, more than our usual maximum of 25. The reason for this is explained below.As well as the traditional version, we have put the playlist on Spotify and you will see the link below. Remember this is only the 4th version on Spotify, so the following there is nowhere near our one here.

The weekly playlist is largely for submissions, not just the usual stuff that we dig out ourselves. The song order is not about song preference, but how the playlist flows.  All embeds open in new windows to aid scrolling. Links to the artists will also appear on I Don't Hear A Single Social Media sites over the next 24 hours. This will help you to discover more about the artists who appear here. 

You will note the increase in songs this week. This is because some of the songs that we embed only have Spotify links. So we decided to embed those, but also clear out the Spotify only songs. With us now doing a Spotify playlist, moving forward, we will not selecting song that does not allow us to embed via our traditional platforms of Bandcamp, Soundcloud or You Tube. Spotify is secondary and a service to artists.


The Spotify Version  





Corin Ashley - Empathy Centre




The Beths - Metal




Legs On Wheels - A.P.E.S.




The Gripweeds - Gene Clark (Broken Wing)




The Finest Hour - Brighter Day




Harvest Runes - String Theory




The Last Gray Wolf - Kentucky Telephone




Kaiser - Gloria


The Goodbye Radio - Twisted Time Travellers




The Lightning Struck - In Her Dreams Tonight




The Vorgs - Scream If You Wanna Go Faster




The Family Battenberg - Anteater




Electric Penguins - When The World Is On Your Shoulder  




BüLA - Back from The Brink




Hooveriii - Tarantula Eye




Andy Alexander - Are You A Dreamer?




Dr. Rocket - Maybe It's Time




Hushtones - Fragments




Standard Sound Project - Demon Mind






Lina Cooper - DADDY ISSUES




Greater Vista - Out Of The City




The Insomnia Night - Cauldron




Sorry Marshal - Off The Wagon




Plaster - Upswing




Visual Super Product - Scratch It Out




Doug Gatta - Bet On The Night




DARK SOCIAL - The Power Of Distractions




Belle Blue - Angeles




Angel Apricot - T4T




Caleb Nichols - Dark Age




Basement, PA - Space Race




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Saturday, 3 May 2025

Janus 4-14 - Ghosts From Your Past (Bandcamp Name Your Price)



Janus 4-14 are a five piece from Mount Airy, North Carolina. We've been interested in what they do for a while now, largely through submissions for the Listening To This Week Playlist. We wanted to review something in the longer format, so have gone back to last year's six track release until the release of their next six track affair. Blue To Infinity, which is released on 14 May.

If you'd like to hear what they are currently up to, we featured the more recent single, I Never Wanna See You Again which is a cracking listen and can be heard here. Songs are built on killer riffs and big choruses with surprises thrown in.



The band inhabit a place somewhere between Indie Rock and Classic Rock, those riffs dictating the former and a mellow vocal and archive Organ sound that goes for the former. The arrangements and particularly, the guitar work is outstanding, yet the solos never lose sight of the song.

The best example of that riveting Guitar playing is on the outstanding She Deserves Love. There is great variety too. The Boy Who Bears The Weight Of The Whole World is something you might have heard on the defunct IRS label, part 80s US Indie, part 90s College Rock.



Teresa is almost Americana with a California Desert Guitar sound that makes you think of Cactus and dryness. That particular beloved by my other half whose hares the song title's name. Everything is in its place across the album which beautifully performed and produced.

A special mention has to be given to the opener, Redrum, which is part Psych Pop, part Alt Rock with a riff to die for. This is my particular favourite, but you know how I fall for melodic Psych. This is my gem in an album of gems. Expect to hear far more of this lot in future years.



You can listen to and buy the album here. It is at name your price, so what have you got to lose?


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Friday, 2 May 2025

Welcome To May!

 


Welcome to May! 

Firstly reflecting on April, it was a strange old month. IDHAS had its busiest month ever for views with almost 55,000, yet it was our quietest month review wise for quite some time as we were involved in lots of future planning. 

As we approach our 9th Year Anniversary, the interest in what we do has been significantly higher and we are receiving offers from all over the world. We are reluctant to take anything else on until we have got I Do Hear A Single up and running as it remains in development with two new members of the team to be added when we can.

Spotify wise has seen artists get greater coverage, but we are still incredibly wary of it. I'm not sure of much benefit that it gives new artists, but if it helps a little, that's only good. We do not plan to be on it apart from the LTTW playlist, we don't listen to stuff on there and our priority will always be other avenues.

We are well behind on Reviews, so expect plenty in May and we have set aside time for them. We don't tend to post on Bandcamp Fridays leaving the field open for listeners and buyers whilst that is on. So we return with Reviews tomorrow evening when the different country's timelines mean that the Friday is complete/

Onwards and Upwards.


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