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A Place To Bury Strangers Onwards To the Wall EP |
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Onwards to the Wall is their 7th EP, and the first one with the band producing, mixing and mastering themselves on new label Dead Oceans. Instead of trying to explore different directions, they perfected their style creating songs that are more precise, catchy, and that incorporate a wider range of styles, adding a garage rock vibe to their more ‘classic’ influences such as Jesus & Mary Chain, Bauhaus and NIN. Some credits for that should go to new bassist Dion Lunadon who comes from a garage-indie background (The D4 and The True Lovers) and whose astonishingly persistent, thunderous bass brilliantly complements Ackermann's morose, haunting vocals and wailing guitars, and Jay Space's weighty, pounding drums.
The EP opens with the squalling "I Lost You": its screeching guitars, industrial siren-drone and sullen vocals catapult the listener into an unsettling, hallucinogenic dream. Lead single "So Far Away" is more structured, almost-hummable, bubbling with post-punk and ‘60s psychedelic influences. It's accompanied by a DIY video (link), created by Ackermann using a collage of his own Hipstamatic photos that feature kissing and driving sequences and a cameo appearance of the Pisa's Leaning Tower. The centerpiece is the title-track, a bleak, intense duet between Ackermann and guest vocalist Alanna Nuala (of Moon), with sexy Cure-esque bass lines, compulsive guitar progressions trembling with frayed feedback, and heavily Joy Division-influenced melodies. The industrial, feedback-drenched noise and the crashing drums come back in the gothic "It'll Be Alright", before the dystopian tones of the closer "Drill It Up" bring things to a close with raw, cacophonic guitar and abrasive, fuzzy bass. Don't those five tracks make you want to ask for more? Good news is that apparently the Brooklyn trio is currently working on their third album...
MP3 Stream: "So Far Away" |
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It's safe to say that A Place to Bury Strangers have become
the Kings of New York noise rock.


Fueled with Voodoo Doughnuts, Alcoholic Faith Mission
delivered to a rockin' crowd in Portland.
Those lucky enough to
enter the House of Blues Boston took a spacey journey
that felt like one long dream starting with opening act I Break Horses.
The student-filled O2 Academy in Manchester started heaving
forward the instant the visual art showed "The Cribs" on the backdrop.