Wednesday, June 30, 2021

The best new June releases

 "At midnight, in the month of June, I stand beneath the mystic moon." (Edgar Allan Poe)

June was traditionally a month when the music scene in the Northern Hemisphere began to wind down towards the summer festival season, with the university towns and their lucrative circuit of gigs closing down for the academic year, but on the goth scene it has always been a time for significant releases (Juju, arguably the quintessential genre-defining album, came out in this month forty years ago), and 2021 is proving to be no exception, with a plethora of emerging and more established artists on the current scene releasing new music this month.

This was originally planned to be the Goth/Post-Punk Revival blog’s second quarterly review for this calendar year, but this is already the third batch of highlights, an acceleration purely dictated by the sheer number of quality releases already this year as we reach its midway point. From dark pop to full-blown gothic rock, the sub-genre niches continue to develop with ever-evolving soundscapes to entice the listener, and this month’s round-up may be the best yet.

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1.       Then Come Silence - When You’re Gone

Goth/Post-Punk Revival’s favourite current band is back with a brand-new song part-premiered in the stunning live-streamed show from the dungeons of the Swedish Royal Palace earlier this year. When You’re Gone should become a staple on the playlists of alternative (and not just exclusively goth) radio stations around the planet, with Alex Svenson’s strong baritone vocal over a melodic post-punk soundscape with the dark duelling guitars of Hugo Zombie and Mattias Ruejas Jonsson providing an edge to a track which is very much in the vein of our 2020 album of the year Machine.



 2.       Whispering SonsVision

This Belgian post-punk band is young, original and brave – three words not always associated with bands in the genre. After the success of debut full-length album Image, the five-piece return with a more challenging yet ultimately rewarding set of generally more stripped-back tracks where raw emotion is very much to the fore. Stand-out track Vision has a typically subtle, tight and complex song structure with a wonderfully off-kilter chorus and dramatic climax that recalls the heady musical days of 1981, when angular chord changes and dramatic climaxes were ten-a-penny.



 3.       A Pale Horse Named DeathBelieve In Something (You Are Lost)

Even in these mask-dominated times, I can imagine the open-mouthed horror of elder goth gate-keepers at the inclusion of APHND in this run-down. Doomgaze, goth grunge, stoner metal, or however you categorise them, the band fronted by ex-Type O Negative sticksman Sal Abruscano is peerless when on top form (as on this new single) when it comes to surprisingly uplifting doomy minor-key melancholia. So what if it has more than a hint of classic early nineties Alice In Chains, turn this up, listen to the affirmative mental health message of the lyrics, close your eyes and imagine that liberating weightless feeling of crowdsurfing over a moshpit. Glance skywards, and you might just see the late, great Peter Steele nodding along to this appreciatively.



 4.       VazumLoved 2 Death

If Type O Negative represent the past of guitar-based goth, Detroit duo Vazum are very much its present and future. After a series of well-received earlier gothgaze releases with other musicians, main man Zach Pliska recruited bassist and vocalist Emily Sturm for a couple of lockdown EPs last year celebrating Hallowe’en and Christmas with a dark twist, taking the band’s sound in a unique and thrilling new direction which reaches its apotheosis with the release this week of new album V+. Combining the cool, churning, driving beat of Curve with the clashing and occasionally cacophonously discordant guitars of Siouxsie and the Banshees, Loved 2 Death is typical of the distinctive, full-on yet mildly disturbing Vazum sound.



 5.       Nox Novacula - Ascension

Also moving up to the A League with their latest release is another US act Nox Novacula, who mix a strong female vocal with a slightly raspy deathrock guitar sound in a deliberately fuzzy mix, giving the impression of a grungier, more muscular Ghost Dance, on their new album Ascension. The title track is a great gateway to what is an impressively consistent album as a whole, with both power and melody lending the overall sound an anthemic feel.



 6.       1919TV Love

Veterans 1919 are back with a great new album, Citizens of Nowhere, with UK scene regular (and album producer) Simon “Ding” Archer replacing the equally experienced Karl Donner on bass. The recruitment of the comparatively youthful Rio Goldhammer had brought a new energy and political conscience to the reformed band on recent albums, and teaser single Singing to the Universe’s radio-friendly chorus might have led some scene observers to the conclusion that the band was aiming at a more mainstream alternative audience. However, on tracks like TV Love, sole founder member Mick Reed’s punishing syncopated tribal beat remains the dominant sound, reminiscent of those early single releases which brought accusations of Killing Joke plagiarism, with typically fine creative guitar work from Sam Evans, who keeps the spirit of the late Mark Tighe alive within the group whilst never attempting to merely imitate him.



 7.       Black AngelSerene

The rise and rise of Bristol-born Matt Vowles’ Black Angel project continues unabated with a third consecutive killer album entitled Prince of Darkness. The overall sound might be so “old school” that the desks have inkwells, but Vowles successfully resuscitates the corpse of 80’s goth with a knowing blend of high production values, skilful songwriting and exquisite performances, like The Sisters of Mercy’s chart-friendly Steinman productions of the late 1980’s. Serene is typically lush, with Corey Landis’ measured vocal multi-tracked over a lilting dark melody that creates a film noir ambiance, drawing the listener in ever closer.



 8.       Ground NeroThe Promise

After debuting their new line-up with the single Into The Blood at the start of the year, Belgian trio Ground Nero are back with an even more perfect exposition of their self-proclaimed “gothic wall of sound” in new song Promise. If there’s a better intro to any track this year I have yet to hear it, with the wonderful deep, ringing tone of main writer Nomad’s guitar blasting the eardrums from the opening chord, with other trademark meandering riffs in the middle-eight. Bassist Phil keeps the beat metronomic to better showcase the excellent lower range of the (still) mystery new singer (although eagle-eyed viewers may have a better idea having seen this video!). Having scored this blog’s album of the year in 2019 with Divergence, Ground Nero will be strong contenders again this time around when they work these full-blooded new songs into a full set.



 9.       Ashes Fallen - Vampira -The Ballad of Maila

Ashes Fallen have been on the scene for a few years now, but have significantly upper their game on new album A Fleeting Melody Out Of A Fading Dream, with James Perry’s vocals much stronger than on previous releases and the ubiquitous Gordon Young’s crystal sharp mastering adding extra layers of depth to the overall sound. Lead single Vampira gave a glimpse of the increased production values which have added an extra gloss the band’s overall image, style and sound, moving them closer to Black Angel territory.



 10.   AdrenochromeThe Knife

With their Sisters-referencing name this band (a kind of Oakland supergroup featuring members of Otzi and Cruz de Navajas amongst others) were always onto a winner in my eyes, and there is some of the charm of the early Sisters’ habit of building a song round simple and repeated riffs, although in truth the overall sound of The Knife is more reminiscent of punkier female-fronted bands like Brigandage and Xmal Deutschland which can surely only be a good thing.



 11.   PermafrostClosed Eyes

Naming bands after my all-time favourite songs is clearly becoming a thing, although there’s not an obvious Magazine influence on this band from the beautiful Norwegian coastal town of Molde. New single Closed Eyes is typical of their modern wave sound which they appropriately describe as “optimistic melancholy”, with vibes of The Cure, Holygram and fellow countrymen Mayflower Madame along the way.



 12.   Hallowed HeartsSupernova

Another one for fans of The Sisters of Mercy, Hallowed Hearts take the mood and (why not?) the melody of all-era goth classic Marian as the basis for the stark upbeat gothgaze of new single Supernova, the lead track of the New York band’s excellent five track EP, which also features their take on a song well-known to fans of The Sisters’ 90’s incarnation, Pink Floyd’s Comfortably Numb.



 13.   DresdenInevitable

Argentinian duo Dresden follow-up their successful 2020 debut EP La Revelacion del Vacio with another EP Ignis Era, whose lead track Inevitable is drenched in the archetypal 2020’s heavily reverberated Cure-esque guitar tone popularised by Antipole, embellished here with mid-tempo goth rock which contains all the usual elements, from breathy low-in-the-mix vocals to occasional swirls of synth.



 14.   EssesLittle Mouse

Little Mouse is the first track pre-released from Oakland band Esses’ forthcoming LP, Bloodletting For The Lonely, which has the unbeatable deathrock credentials of being produced by the legendary Skot B and being released on Poland’s Bat-Cave label. Little Mouse is exactly the kind of energetically shouty unsettling deathrock punk one would expect from the band, with all the loose edges mercifully left intact.



 15.   149Vertigo

Back to the East Coast for another band who put the punk into post-punk. Vertigo is the opening song of 149’s self-titled debut EP and from the opening riff which borrows heavily from Killing Joke’s Pssyche, the track is a thrillingly low-fi electropunk ride. The rest of the EP fulfils the promise of the opener, albeit a little less breathlessly, allowing for a little more light and shade into a sound that is definitely zeitgeist-capturing.



 16.   Underground FirePassage

Fans of trad goth rock will lover this new track from Scandanavian goth'n'roll scene veteran Rob Coffinshaker’s current project, with the Swede in fine crooning form over another song which leans heavily on Steinman-era Sisters. Retro? - yes, uncomplicated? - yes, shamelessly unoriginal? – yes,  but there’s a great foot-tapping chorus, some classic riffing and a timeless feel to a track that is quintessentially goth.



 17.   Slow Danse With The DeadForget Me Not

It wouldn’t be a proper Goth/Post-Punk Revival blog round-up if it didn’t contain an excellent new release from the ever-prolific New Mexico one-man band Slow Danse With The Dead. Although the usual melancholy, semi-deadpan vocal is very much on display on Forget Me Not, the minimalist misery-goth sound has been fleshed out with some plaintive echoing guitar in a pleasing new direction from a project which never fails to deliver.



 18.   Kaelan Mikla - Ósýnileg

Ósýnileg is the second single of the year from Icelandic ice queens Kaelan Mikla, whose journey towards global dark synthpop world dominance continues with a frankly somewhat dull and saccharine-coated song which has more in common with the production heavy likes of Strawberry Switchblade and Dubstar than their own raw and energetic early efforts, although the main repeated one-finger synth motif means that the sound is still instantly recognisable as Kaelan Mikla.



 19.   New HauntsStill Dark Sky

If Kaelan Mikla’s crown seems to be slipping somewhat, into the breach storm UK act New Haunts with their debut for seminal label Cold Transmission Records, Still Dark Sky. The title track is effortlessly cool dark electro, mixing a breathy and occasionally pitchy Alice Sheridan vocal with a deceptively simple haunting melody over an eminently dark and danceable beat.



20.   DarkIn The Shadows

Hamburg-based alternative dancefloor champion Dark is back with another killer synth riff and accompanying beautifully shot video with In The Shadows. The very epitome of the current club-based electro-goth sound, In The Shadows again features an ultra-bass male vocal over a 160 bpm backing, carrying on the great work of last year’s debut EP Nightmare.


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