Music Round Up. Jan & Feb 2024

Welcome to the third birthday of The Ways of Exile! 

This blog was never intended to be a long term thing. To be honest I never had any plans for it, TWoE was always just to give me something to do in lockdown to keep myself sane and to wave my hands around and bang on about the music I love in a different way.

I’m pretty sure that without the Drowned in Sound forum I wouldn’t have lasted more than a few months, at thanks to everyone on there who look in every month and show interest.

I’m also delighted over the years just how many acts have read the blog as well. I’ve never been the kind of person who hangs around at gigs and talks to the bands so it’s nice to be able to tell people that their music is having an impact on me and that I think their work is great.

It always reads a bit hollow when someone says thanks for reading but I really mean it. The numbers for my end of year write up were more than double my normal readership and I’m still a little in shock about it.

But thank you, I really love getting feedback people’s feedback and obviously I enjoy trying to signal boost the music I love further out into the world.

Anyway, let’s talk about 2024. And a few albums I missed from 2023.

The Songwhip links will bring you to a page with a link for the song featured on all the streaming platforms.


Guhts

Regeneration

Opening your debut album with an eight minute epic called White Noise is a hell of a statement for a band to make. The fact that the song is sludgy, uncompromising and a little disorientating makes it an even bigger ask of the listener, but you know what? That’s fine. Consider it a litmus test. If you’re in on this, then Regeneration is an album you’re going to love.

Guhts (Guts) aren’t really in the game to pander to the listener. Amber Gardner’s vocal style is very unusual and the way it writhes and contorts along to the music rather than sticking to the song’s melody is almost unique. I think Julie Christmas is the only person who would be anything similar.

However, she does dial the strangeness back when needed. During Til’ Death, the riffs drop out and she almost coos “Dance with me”. It’s alluring but also feels like something very bad is going to happen, as the band’s slow dissonant vibe isn’t what most would consider come hither music.

Regeneration should be more a challenge to listen to than it actually is. This is a great heavy album and interesting take on post metal, with its use of electronics for texture helping it stand out from the crowd. Gardner’s vocals are going to be marmite for people but hopefully people are up for something a bit unusual these days. 

https://songwhip.com/guhts/regeneration


John Jejada

Resound

Sometimes I find it very difficult to write about electronica. There’s a few touchstones like genre and acts the artist in question sounds like, but that’s leaving me very little to go on here. What I can tell you is that this is a lush album of slow, warm techno. At 35 minutes seems very short for a dance album but not a second is wasted, Resound gets in and gets out leaving you wanting more.

I may not have a lot that’s in depth to say, but this album has been helping me through winter. Its warm club vibes keeping the cold out and reminding me of brighter days to come. 

https://songwhip.com/john-tejada/simulacrum2023


Cold In Berlin

The Body is the Wound EP

It feels that in the last few years, a lot of bands have been hiding behind the Post Punk label while being obviously influenced by the classic Goth bands. However, Cold in Berlin have always been refreshingly up front about being Goth as fuck and this ep isn’t any different.

The Body is the Wound is their first release since 2019 and the band come storming out the gate with Dream One. It kicks this ep off with a deliciously heavy, doomy goth headbanger and the mix of stabbing synth lines and Maya’s soaring vocal provide more drama and atmosphere than I’ve heard in a long time.

The rest of the ep lives up to the promise of the opener, the moody plaintive cries of Spotlight, the filthy low end of When Did You See Her Last and the vocal pyrotechnics of Found Out make this a very welcome return for the band.

https://songwhip.com/coldinberlin/the-body-is-the-wound


Volkor X

The Loop (Instrumental version)

I was a big fan of Volkor X’s album, The Loop. It’s an epic story of an exploratory space mission that mixes narration with music and feels like a cross between an audiobook and soundtrack. Unfortunately, there are only so many times you’re going to go back and listen to the same story, and while I enjoyed the album, it was always going to have a limited shelf life.

With the release of the instrumental version of The Loop, the album has none of these drawbacks. While most of the dialogue tracks were quite short, songs like Float really come into their own as an instrumental track, all the warmth and wonder comes through without someone speaking over it.

Previously, the long run time was a bit of a effort, now the album flies by, starry eyed and full of synths. Volkor X’s mix of post rock and the wide eyed electronica of the early M83 albums lands perfectly here, allowing you to feel the wonder of the soundtrack they’ve made.

I do think it’s funny that without the narration, you would never realise that The Loop is a horror story. For a self styled intergalactic despot, Volkor X makes some very pretty music.

https://songwhip.com/volkor-x/float-instrumental-version


Bipolar Architecture

Metaphysicize

Post metal is one of those genres that people just can’t help but cross pollinate with other sounds and Bipolar Architecture have thrown Slow Death, and Blackened Prog into the mix. Metaphysicize is the unholy result and is a must for fans of slow and heavy music.

The title track starts with some moody post metal driven by the bass and drums, almost reminiscent of Tool, before the kick drums rush in and give us our first taste of the death metal that lurks around this album.

The third track, Death of the Architect is the album highlight for me and again it’s all about the drums. Huge sounding toms slowly batter into the song before the double kicks assault your ears. It’s a heaviness that kind of reminds me of Bolt Thrower, but more in spirit than sound.

As I always say on this blog, it takes a lot to stand out in these oversaturated genres. It’s very easy to sound like just another copy, but Bipolar Architecture do more than enough to stand out from the crowd with this entertaining and really satisfying slice of heavy music.

https://songwhip.com/bipolararchitecture/death-of-the-architect


The Fauns

How Lost

The Fauns have been on hiatus for a long time now, their last album was released in 2013. And while the world may have moved on a lot musically, shoegaze has never been as popular as it is today. So this is obviously the best time for a shoegaze band to start up again.

However, The Fawns have moved on as well. Instead of jumping onto the current wave guitar fuzz that’s out there, How Lost embraces dance music to wonderful effect.  

The opener, Mixtape Days combines chiming guitars, dance beats and breathy vocals to create a sound far more like the lush synths of Ladytron than any shoegaze band. The second track, Shake Your Hair somehow manages to up the bliss levels from the opener and will be a showstopper live.

It took me a while to realise that Doot Doot is a Freur cover, which to be fair, is pretty obscure track selection for anyone. Freur were the band that went on to become Underworld so The Fauns have obviously been digging into the roots of dance music. Thankfully, they manage to improve on the admittedly dodgy original.

Now, all this talk of dance music doesn’t mean that the band have put their guitars away, there’s a few songs here that remind me of Curve and the closer, Spacewreck is a beautiful, languid slice of blissful shoegaze.

As comebacks go, How Lost is an incredible reintroduction to a band who will hopefully make a much bigger name for themselves on their second go round.  

https://songwhip.com/thefauns/shakeyourhair


Shipwreck Karpathos

Being Human

The first I heard of Shipwreck Karpathos was a review that said that the album sounded like Midwestern Emo mixed with post rock. Now, I had no idea what the hell that would sound like so checked it out and, well, here we are.

The album starts with an energetic bang as Don’t Panic comes crashing out with some high speed, riffy indie rock, but it quickly slows down and takes on a more thoughtful pace. What I wasn’t expecting was the trumpet to kick in, and there’s very little I like more in my guitar music that a trumpet.

So, what you get on Being Human is some very pretty thoughtful, instrumental indie, interspersed with some breakneck, heavy riffing. And sometimes it’s adorned with strings and brass. It really doesn’t sound quite like anything else I listen to, but it does sound amazing.

The title track reminds me a bit of Broken Social Scene at their most joyful, jamming with And So I Watch You From Afar, while the trumpeter really brings the song to life.

This is an incredibly uplifting album and there’s just something about the arrangements that puts a huge smile on my face. Don’t sleep on this record and let it bring some sun into your life. 

https://songwhip.com/shipwreckkarpathos/scene-xii-being-human


Healthyliving

Songs of Abundance, Psalms of Grief

If I’d managed to see Heathyliving live a few weeks before I started to write up my albums of the year, Songs of Abundance would have easily made its way into the top 10. Over the last two months I’ve fallen head over heels for this album, so I’m going to add this review here.

The band cover a lot of ground on this album, from racing alt rock to post metal riffs, to the more atmospheric passages, but manage to assemble it in a way that sounds unique. 

While the songs are great, the band’s not so secret weapon is Amaya López-Carromero. Whereas a lot of female singers in metal use an operatic style, the way Amaya hits the high notes feels far closer to a soul singer.

As amazing as this album is, Healthyliving are somehow even better live. This is a band that could be huge if the music god’s smile on them. With bands like Sleep Token proving there is an appetite for melodic mixed with the Heavy, hopefully Healthyliving  can catch this rising tide because god knows the world needs more bands like this to break out.

https://songwhip.com/healthyliving/to-the-gallows


Final Coil

The World We Inherited

I’d like to apologise to Final Coil, who’s album The World We Inherited is a fantastic post prog metal album. It’s really interesting, has rich electronic textures, great riffs and, for some reason, I’ve been completely unable to put together a coherent thought to explain why you should check them out.

Seriously, The World We Inherited is the first album on my best of the year list and I still can’t explain why. 

As a reviewer this is more than a little embarrassing. Normally when this happens I just sack off the review and pretend it never happened, but I like this album too much not to recommend it.  Sorry Lads.

But! If any of this sounds like your thing, run for this album. 

https://songwhip.com/finalcoil/chemtrails

Albums of the Year 2019

It’s been an odd year in music for me, there was a slew of great music at the beginning of the year only to drop off steeply towards summer. It got to the point that in October I was worried I wouldn’t even make a full top 10 at the end of the year. Luckily the last 2 months have been pretty amazing and topped the list up nicely.

I have found myself listening to more music by women this year, I’m not sure it’s a massive change in my tastes or just I’ve found the female artists playing the kind of music I like. Emma Ruth Rundle and A.A. Williams brought a folk influence into my world :O, while bands like Ithaca and Employed to Serve proved that women can be every bit as hardcore as anyone else.

Without further ado were we go. In no order, until they are.


Teeth of the Sea

Wraith

This is a weird one. On my first write up of the year I said that this album was a lock for my end of the year list. By June I hadn’t bothered with it much. I ended up seeing them 3 times in the year and that put the album firmly back on the list, they were stunning, with the live versions of this albums songs becoming proper face melters.

As always with Teeth of the Sea there are some full on tracks this album but there’s a lot of ambient tracks as well, and dear reader, ambient passages are not my thing at all. I started to think that the album was a bit dull.

Well, sometimes I can be a bit slow. Yes, there are slow parts but you need them. You can’t run at full pelt of I’d rather, Jack or Hiraeth, you’d burn the listener out, so instead you have the slow, considered pieces that lead you through the brisk 46 minutes here.

I’ve over described TotS as 65daysofstatic meet Ennio Morricone to score a John Carpenter film, but I doubt I’m going to stop, it gets their sound across well enough to know if you’re interested or not, and you should be.  

Gladiators Ready

Alcest 

Spiritual Instinct 

Pretty. That’s not a work usually used to describe Black metal related music, but Spiritual Instinct, despite having shrieked vocals and blast beats is very easy on the ear.

No big shock for Alcest, who did go Shoegaze on Shelter but they are back to being a metal band, and this album is far more driving and full on than they have been before, with the track Protection being a standout example of the harder style they now use.

The most remarkable thing about this album is the centerpiece track, L’lle des Mort which despite clocking in at over 9 minutes, doesn’t get repetitive and dull, unlike other bands kicking around this year. Twelve years on and Alcest have made their best album yet. This is brilliant stuff.

Protection


Alex Banks

Beneath the Surface

Not all electronic music has to be for the dance floor and not all music not for the floor has to be dull ambient. This is filthy music. Harking back to the turn of the decade this album has a lot of the post dubstep sound going on, lots of breaks and wood blocks  but builds on the sound rather than aping it. Banks is a big fan of filthy synth and it’s a wonder to behold. While it’s not an album aimed at the clubs, there’s a few bangers on here, Spiralling could cause a dance floor some early evening damage. Turn it up and annoy the hell out of your neighbours.

In the Silence

Is Bliss

Strange Communication 

I normally make a huge fuss about originality in music and I have almost no tolerance for nostalgia but sometimes you have to just shut up and just enjoy the music.

Is Bliss are an out and out shoegaze band. There’s a dash of 60’s psych and a whole boatload of Storm in Heaven era Verve and it sounds magnificent. I don’t have much more to add, it’s a bright and breezy album of loveliness and what more could you want?  

Can’t sleep forever

Delta Mainline

Bel Avenir

The Spirit (ualized) of Jason Pierce hangs pretty heavily over the start of this album, it’s impossible to ignore but is no way meant as an insult. The first track builds with some Krautrock until 1 minute 40 when it switches gear and goes full choir and strings. It really is an amazing statement of intent and that’s what you need for an ear catching start to an album.

Visions of Post America is the best example of DM doing what Spiritualized don’t do any more. Opening up with some scuzzy 60’s psych the song locks into the Electric Mainline for the midsection, holding there a while before shooting for the stratosphere as the choir come back and ladies and gentlemen we are floating in space.  

In fact the front of the album can overshadow the second half, it took a few listens where I just jumped half way through to get a handle on the no less great back half of the record. It’s just not as full on. But there’s lots on here, we even have a steel guitar led country song with Mountain Music.

So this isn’t the most original sounding album, but they stamp their own personality on it and make it their own. It’s an amazing album that deserves a lot more attention.

Visions of post America

https://deltamainline.bandcamp.com/track/visions-of-post-america


Brutality will Prevail 

Misery Sequence 

Sometimes I just need music that is just thrown down aggressive. Music for the pit, music for bloody knuckles and clenched teeth. And holy crap do Brutality will Prevail deliver. This is the Welsh band’s fifth album and just showcases what they do best. Shout along lines, huge breakdowns, massive, headbanging riffs. This is the act that got me into Harcore and while it’s not pretty, this huge sludgy heavy sound was something that I really needed in my life. 

It’s a short album but that’s a good thing here, get in get out. 

It’s not all unrelenting beatdowns though, the second last track Breathless dails the fury down bringing in a female vocalist whose sweet voice offsets the heaviness of the track.

And then smash you with a furious last track to finish the album in style. 

Brutal in the best way.   

Slither

Cold in Berlin

Rituals of Surrender

How to sum up this album?

There’s a webcomic called My life as a background Slytherin where they make fun of Snape’s wildly melodramatic ways. Here’s a great example.

So what the hell am I talking about? CiB are so fantastically, over dramatically Goth. It’s incredible. I love it. This sounds like if you messed with them you’d get stabbed with an eyeliner, and you’d regret it. Ok, now I’m getting into Uni in jokes. Back to the music.

Ok,CiB play fantastic Goth metal, there’s some Sabbath Doom on the guitars, but this is all about the atmosphere, dry ice and white light but thankfully it has the songs to back it up. I’m not sure fun is a word to use at such a dark album but it absolutely makes me smile and want to throw shapes. You can never fully recover from being a Goth and I don’t think I want to.

Dark Days


Whitechapel

The Valley

My first reaction to The Valley was shock. Even as a long term metal fan the is a filthy, aggressive album. It’s such a dark album with some bile filled lyrics I found it off putting. I was never much of a fan of the macho bullshit side of Metal and this seemed unnecessarily grim.    

Turns out context is everything.

This is an album about the vocalists youth, made from passages of his mother journal, a mother who was a schizophrenic and drug addict and the abuse he suffered at the hands of his stepfather.

Suddenly it’s clear that this isn’t just another Edgelord metal album, this real and make the rage and hate wrapped up in here make more sense, makes it easier to connect with. I mean, the second song, Forgiveness Is Weakness opens with lines 

“He is finally dead, Come celebrate this day, 

It was slow and full of pain. Good riddance” 

And from there it gets more fucked up. This is not easy listening.

But I haven’t even talked about the music. As I said at the opening, this is a fantastically ugly album, it’s rage and hate funnelled through a huge assault of riffing and blast beats, but if that’s all there was I wouldn’t be writing this. There is a slower side to The Valley, almost tender. Hickory Creek is soft enough to give off a bit of an Alice in Chains vibe and is the only song with fully clean singing. It’s something I find I need with really heavy albums, I need a counterpoint, a break intense pummeling and this album balances it well.

If you like extreme metal you really should give this a go.

When a demon defiles a witch.


Employed to Serve

Eternal Forward Motion

I’ve heard that your taste in music is meant to mellow over the years. It hasn’t for me though, I find myself leaning into the harder side of metal these days. Maybe it’s a jaded thing but this is where I get my kicks and other types of music just don’t have the same rush.  

Saying all that, when this album came out and I think I listened to it once and went “That’s a bit shouty” and didn’t go back to it. 

Luckily I managed to see them live over the summer and holy hell did they click. They are a force of nature live, and suddenly the album was getting serious play over the summer.  This very nearly was my album of the year, but as the autumn kicked in I found myself listening to it a little less, but that has nothing to do with the quality of the album. This is such an aggressive album, burning fury, machine gun riffs, screams and bellowed rage.

Now, it’s not all 1000 miles an hour, the album does have it’s slower tracks, which stops everything blurring together but it’s only slower in comparison. 

If you want some righteous anger, this is your place to find it. This was almost my album of the year but was just held off by the next band.

Force fed

Numenorean

Adore

And here it is, the moment you’ll all been waiting for, my album of the year.

Numenorean are a Blackgaze band for Canada, this is their second album and should rightly be held up as much as Deafheaven as far as I’m concerned.

The thing that struck me most about this album is how much more melodic it is than most Blackgaze, the slower interlude songs are almost goth in places, with tinges of Fields of the Nephilim in places. (I’m probably not selling this to many people 😀 )

It’s incredible to see a band grow so much from their first album, the songwriting shines. The way they mix the clean and melodic with the harsh Black Metal sound is my favourite of any on the Blackgaze bands.

I’m really looking forward to seeing what the rest of their career will being us. 

Adore

Bonus reviews!

The Cure

Live in Hyde Park

I find that I only listen to a live album once or twice before I get bored of it and lose interest.  To be honest, this one is no different in that respect, what is different is that I was at this gig and it was one of the best I’ve ever been to. I’ve found that the live album can make me reassess gigs I’ve been to negatively (Bowie at Glastonbury being the best example of this) but that’s not happening here. This is the Cure grandstanding just how amazing they are and I’m glad I was up the front for it.


Enrico Sangiuliano

Biomorph

I discovered Enrico’s album Biomorph from 2018. It’s big room techno with some trancy synths that stop the whole thing being really boring. This is just an album of propper bangers. Love it. 


EP’s

A.A. Williams 

This ep was released in January and I’m still listening to it about once a week. It’s insane that this is A.A’s debut release. This is a perfectly crafted ep, four songs sitting on the edge of Goth tinged indie and shoegazing. The confidence and self assurance she shows is breathtaking and I can’t wait for more material. If you like Chelsea Woolfe or Emma Ruth Rendel you should love this.

Control

Curse these metal hands

Pijn and Conjurer got together to form a supergroup for a one off performance at Arctangent festival. They put those 4 tracks on this EP, and it is brilliant.

The first track is a lot lighter that the rest, big singalong bits and some Brian May guitar parts, it’s a lot of fun.

The next three tracks are more what you would expect from these two bands, head down riffing that’s atmospheric and heavy as hell. Let’s hope there’s another collaboration.  


Disappointed. 

There were some big disappointments this year, that Tool album was always going to be a bit of a let down after a 13 year wait but fucking hell. Almost every song should have had about 5 minutes edited off them. If you’re going to have songs clocking in over 11 minutes please do something interesting. Maybe I’m just not into “hypnotic repetition” but it gets tedious really quickly. Which is a pity, there is a great album in here.

(Edit) Have just realised that Teeth of the Sea do “hypnotic repetition”, they just do it well so, IDK, just don’t be boring?

65daysofstatic made an album with the aim of taking the feeling of dread in the air and turning it music. What we got was a rather soulless mostly ambient record. I know they’ve been working on algorithmic song construction but for me this has lost anything to emotionally attach to, there’s nothing to get your teeth into, it’s almost completely faceless. But to be honest, that may have been the point.

The Cult of Luna made a great album but made 1 hour 20 minutes of it. I just can’t stay involved in such grinding music for that amount of time and it puts me off ever putting the album on. Which is a shame as it’s good stuff. 

The National released an album, it’s a pity it’s 2010 since they released one I’ve enjoyed. I used to love them :/ 

Anyway. To sum up, not a gold standard year but pretty damn great.

4 stars.

My year in metal 2019

This was a pretty amazing year in metal for me.

It’s interesting that 5 of these bands have women singing (Well, 3 singing and 2 screaming 😀 ) which is a huge change from my older listening habits.

Numenorean.

Album of the year. The best Blackgaze album I’ve ever heard. Melds the heavy with the pretty goth bits so well.

Employed To Serve 

Almost album of the year. Such aggressive hardcore / metal, Justine’s screamed vocals pack such a huge punch. Also they’re a phenomenal live band the the least likely I’ve seen to play Glastonbury.

Whitechapel 

Filthy, brutal deathcore but with enough clean singing to stop the whole album becoming grindingly one note.

Not to say that it isn’t one of the most aggressive albums I’ve heard, but there’s texture to it, it’s more than just blast beats and bellowing.  

Brutus

Mixing punk, shoegazing and metal in a way I’ve never heard before. And I guess every review should comment in amazement at how the drummer can play like that, and sing, she’s incredible.  

Brutality Will Prevail 

Dirty sludgy hardcore from Wales. Huge riffs, bigger breakdowns.

Nice.

Ithaca 

Making Employed to Serve seem demure in comparison. 10 songs in 31 minutes is the short, sharp punch to the face you’d hope from something this full on. UK Hardcore is on the up theses days and I love it. 

Rammstein

Who would have thought Rammstein still had a good album in them, let alone a great one?

Best thing they’ve done in years.

Cold In Berlin 

Melodramatic Goth doom metal at its best.  

What more description do you need 😀

Alcest

Alcest finally go full metal. Now it’s still very pretty but the blast beats and screaming have been moved to the fore and, IMO, makes for a better sound. It gives the record an energy that got lost in the more shoegazing albums.

Gold 

Mixing alt rock and metal seamlessly. The way you suddenly realise the song has  gotten heavier without being jaring. It’s a great album somewhat let down by a weak last 3 songs.

Here’s the Spotify primer.