LISTEN: For Breakfast – ‘Mother’

A cacophony of melodic, jazzy, post-punk inspired sound; North London six-piece For Breakfast have shared their latest single, ‘Mother’. Released via DIY label Glasshouse Records, the track is lifted from the band’s debut EP Songs In the Key of O, which is set for release later this year.

Formed of Will Eckersley (drums), Joe Thompson (guitar), Sam Birkett (bass/backing vocals), Omar Zaghouani (guitar), Gail Tasker (flute), and Maya Harrison (vocals/keys), For Breakfast create spacious, alternative soundscapes. ‘Mother’ is a shining example of this; with its caressing vocals, psych-infused guitars, and manic breakdown at the close of the track. The song is inspired by “adolescent anxiety in the family home”.

The band will be celebrating the release of their new track at their headline show at The Windmill, Brixton on 19th March (event details here), so make sure you head down if you like what you’ve heard. Listen to ‘Mother’ below, and follow For Breakfast on Facebook and Spotify for more updates.

Photo Credit: Benjamin Leggett

Kate Crudgington
@KCBobCut

Get In Her Ears w/ Bad Honey 12.03.20

Tash was back in the studio this week with new music from bigfatbig, Toygirl, JFDR, Jett Kwong, Song Sung and C’est Karma.

Bad Honey were guests in the studio playing their latest single ‘Circles’ and chatting about their new EP Awake Tonight, which is set for release on 27th March. They also picked MEI as their fav new music artist.

Listen back here:

Tracklist
Jackie Shane – Any Other Way
Bigfatbig – Bored
Toygirl – Moonlight Velvet
Claire Pitt Wigmore – August Rain
Lexytron – Blue
The Black Mariah Theater – Got No Luck
Ellis – The Drain
Guitar Gabby and The Txlips – The Dead Pool
Alex Jayne – 90s Dream
Jett Kwong – Tokyo Bath
JFDR – Think Too Fast
C’est Karma – Girls
BLOM – Be Kind
Hunger Moon – Honey
Geiste – Dither
Okay Kaya – Habitual Love
MEI – Dance To Pain
AIKO – Down
LUVK – Dead Wrong
CLT DRP – Where The Boys Are
Song Sung – Come To The Water
Moon Panda – Rick F***in Dalton
Bryde – The Trouble Is
The Crystal Furs – Too Kind To Be Cruel
Annie Taylor – Under Your Spell
Peggy Lee – Fever

ALBUM: The Wants – ‘Container’

Formed by Madison Velding-VanDam and Heather Elle from New York art-punk band Bodega, The Wants‘ debut album Container is a punchy, defiant, riot of a record that simultaneously reflects and resists anxiety, on both a personal and wider scale. With its swaggering beats, techno influences, and to-the-point lyricism; it flows seamlessly from track-to-track demanding uninterrupted listening from the offset.

The Wants began taking shape when drummer Jason Gates and Velding-VanDam met in New York in 2014, but became fully formed while Velding-VanDam and Elle were working together under the Bodega moniker years later. Realising they all had a passion for electronic music, the three began writing together, and Container is the result of this collaboration.

Instrumental opener ‘Ramp’ commands attention with its thudding kick drum, while eponymous track ‘Container’ pulses with brooding bass lines and deadpan lyrical delivery. Pounding instrumental ‘Machine Room’ bleeds in to ‘Fear My Society’. “Will you love me if I’m a failure?” agonises Velding-VanDam, over funky beats and surprisingly buoyant synths. It feels odd to dance around to a track that’s fueled by anxiety and alienation, but it’s a natural response to The Wants driving rhythms.

Making space to individually review each of Container‘s tracks feels odd, as the record is such a cohesive creation, where each track transitions smoothly in to the next. Instrumental ‘Aluminium’ blends in to the unsettling ‘Ape Trap’. “I will stay a deviant, or else I die of boredom” Velding-VanDam sings, desperate to escape his metaphorical cell. Instrumental ‘Waiting Room’ builds on this tension, until its relieved by the confessional ‘Clearly A Crisis’. “I have no intimacy, I’m never vul-ner-able” – Velding-VanDam takes care to repeat, and speak this line with intense clarity.

The funky beats on ‘Nuclear Party’ float around as the cute threat of “kiss my bombs” ricochets between your ears. The bouncy ‘Hydra’ follows, before eerie instrumental ‘Voltage’ closes the record on a somber note. It’s a striking offering, with each scratch, pulse, and echo captured clearly. The band recorded the album in their bedrooms and their rehearsal space — a re-purposed HANJIN shipping container situated in the middle of a dumpling factory parking lot — so it’s a testament to their personal, and joint production skills that these elements can be heard in the mix.

With their myriad of influences – including the literature of Jenny Holzer, the sounds of The National, and a love for techno –  The Wants have created a sonic space on Container that’s somewhere between the catchy electronics of Depeche Mode, the angsty lyrics of early Sonic Youth. It’s a distracting record, in the best possible way, and deserves your undivided attention.

Listen to Container in full here. Follow The Wants on Spotify and Facebook for more updates.

Photo Credit: Madison Carroll

Kate Crudgington
@KCBobCut

Track Of The Day: Fightmilk – ‘I’m Starting To Think You Don’t Even Want To Go To Space’

Fightmilk are back with an electrifying new single ‘I’m Starting To Think You Don’t Even Want To Go To Space’, their first release following Not With That Attitude, released via Reckless Yes in November 2018.

Fightmilk marry an infectious pop melody, crunchy guitars and naturally, a cosmic vibe in this latest release. The track begins with a soaring atmospheric synth, which when accompanied by the jangly, energy-fuelled guitar of the chorus creates plenty of atmosphere, contrary to the title of the song.

Healey’s delicate yet driving bass-line provides a solid backbone for Lily’s catchy vocal to cut through whilst leaving enough room for the punchy, gritty chorus to have a huge impact. The final chorus is pre-empted by a raucous cacophony of ascending noise, leading seemingly to space but giving way one last time for the iconic hook “watching interstellar didn’t make it better” sung with powerful conviction by Lily. The track is a space-age anthem, leaving a real sense of excitement as to where Fightmilk will take us next!

 

‘I’m Starting To Think You Don’t Even Want To Go To Space’ is released digitally on 20th March via Reckless Yes.

Amber Scott
@izzyoppscott