Love Kicked and Still Kicking: A Retrospective on The Shivers’ Debut Charades

Only One On The Mountain

“Give to me your soul.”

I couldn’t tell you exactly when or where I first heard The Shivers’ 2004 debut album Charades. I don’t remember first pressing play, and I don’t know if it was love at first spin or if it just slowly seeped through my skin, a drop more with every listen. In a lot of ways, it feels like it’s always been there, that I’ve always loved it. It’s hard to imagine a version of me that is not partly Charades.

NPR lists Aaron Paul and Daniel Radcliffe as noted fans of the band, so it’s possible that I first heard it through one of their endorsements. In a profile with Details, Paul reported that before his wedding to Lauren Parsekian in 2013, he tracked down The Shivers’ frontman Keith Zarriello to perform “Beauty” at the ceremony, joined by the entire guest list, all of whom he had emailed the song to in advance with instructions to learn the lyrics and sing along. The performance reportedly caused Parsekian to weep “in the most beautiful way ever.” And if that’s not a ringing endorsement, I don’t know what is.

“Maybe someday you’ll be gay.”

Throughout The Shivers’ tenure, Zarriello has been joined by a rotating cast of band members. At the time of Charades, the band consisted of Brian Factor, Cesar Alvarez, and Cameron Hull. There’s not a whole lot of biographical details to be found on Mr. Zarriello, but there is one very important fact to understand about the mastermind behind Charades before any further discussion: he is from New York. City, that is. The Big Apple. Apparently he lived in Montreal for some indeterminate amount of time, but ultimately returned to the city, as all New Yorkers do, or so I’ve been told. 

“You’re beautiful / Why would you wanna die?”

Charades begins with the title track, which is just the final minute and a half of the record reversed, though you might not guess it even after several listens. “Charades” stands quite singularly as a gentle, flowing current that guides you to the first real song on the album, “L.I.E.” It’s here where the listener is introduced to the heart of the record, that being Zarriello’s gentle, drawling, emotively inflected, deliberately annunciated, crooning vocals. His ear for a timeless melody is matched only by those whose melodies have already been time-tested. Though you might be tempted to call his lyrics poetic, you will be quickly corrected when he asserts, “I’m not a poet and I’m not a clown / I just think these things and then I write them down.” Fair enough, Keith.

This heart, despite its lively pulse, wouldn’t be half as effective without the album’s lungs: the fuzzy, possessive, tight yet embryonic guitars that gust the album forward even in the moments when Zarriello’s voice sounds like it might crack, shatter, combust, or dissolve.

“We’re on the beaches of Ibiza, baby.”

Let’s check out the package itself. The album’s cover features a black-and-white photograph of Zarriello bundled up in a coat and hat, his hands nested deeply in his pockets. The photo is bordered by the name of the band above and the name of the album below on a simple white backdrop. You might be pointed toward a cold, wintery sound from this (and not wrongly so!), but on second glance, you might also note that our main man is backed by a chorus of swim-trunked and topless beachgoers. It’s a fitting contrast. As frosted and numb as the record can be, it is equally embodied, if not triumphed, by a transcendent, smoggy, campfire warmth, like the hot air flowing out of a Brooklyn subway grate battling with the harsh December chill.

It would be hard to overstate the range present on Charades. For every gorgeously constructed love ballad (of which there is an abundance on this record and through the rest of The Shivers’ catalog), there is a tonally polar, haggard and swaggering cut like “The Ghetto” or “SoHo Party,” the latter of which might encapsulate that variety better than any other. That track opens with a voicemail message from Zarriello’s mother (presumably to a much younger Keith) telling him to get his room ready for the painters. This is followed by a metronomic procession of dissonant key stabs and the lyrics “Get your face out of my vagina / and get those balls off my tits / I really am not liking any of this” before it concludes with an interpolation of Cat Stevens’ enchanting 1971 album opener “The Wind.”

Zarriello’s influences are no more obscured through the rest of the record, which includes a rendition of Leonard Cohen’s “Chelsea Hotel #2.” These two artists, along with Tom Waits, whose influence accounts for some of the album’s gritty underbelly, might be the nearest touchpoints for new listeners, but be assured, none of them could have made these songs or this record work like Keith Zarriello could. For a more contemporary relation, Zarriello’s tastefully off-kilter, multi-tracked style of production recall a Microphones-era Phil Elverum, had he a morsel less mopiness and an additional fistful of Lou Reed-esque swagger.

“Oh it seems I was Moses / You were Jesus Christ.”

What makes Charades so remarkable is that all of it works. Twenty songs (the Bandcamp version is missing two tracks, and the vinyl reissue even more), nearly 70 minutes, and not a moment wasted. It is an album of ideas, and every one of them pays off, from the New York lowlife anthems (“Violence” and “The Ghetto”) to the lullabies (“Sunshine”) to the should-be-out-of-place electronica tune (“Bedroomer”) and all the love songs that range from bitter (“I Could Care Less”) to sweet (“Roses”) to wistful (“Maybe, Baby”) to devotional (“Kisses”) to make-all-your-wedding-attendees-memorize-the-words (“Beauty”).

Zarriello’s Handwritten tracklist

These love songs are not easy. They clutch, knead, scratch, and gnaw at the heart, the throat, the eyes, and anywhere else they can get inside. They ache. Even those on the sweeter side are rife with an awareness that, regardless of how this ends, it will hurt. They’re written by someone who loves the pain—is addicted, maybe—someone who has loved and spit and shrieked, who has kicked and been kicked and just keeps crawling back for more. Keith Zarriello is a lover.

For the most part, all these songs are fairly simple, at least insofar as someone like Leonard Cohen wrote simple songs. Vocals and guitar, some New York ambience. Drums when necessary, and the occasional keyboard or tape loop. No song has more or less than what it needs, and what it needs, it gets in its most unadulterated form, from the fragile, tape-warbly guitars of “Maybe, Baby” to the trip hop backbeat of “Violence” to the swinging, speakeasy piano and horns on “The Ghetto.”

“Hasidic Jews are praying in the corner of the ghetto parking garage.”

There’s a curious sort of restraint on Charades, but that’s not quite right. It might be better put that Zarriello sounds perfectly at home here. He doesn’t need to put out or prove anything to anyone; this is his house, this is his city, and these are his songs (even the Cohen cover). Whether you like it here or not, he couldn’t care less.

By all reason, you should be unequivocally correct to think it would be jarring to hear lines like “I could stare at a white woman’s hair / or a black woman’s rear end and thighs / I could surmise in my disguise / that your Puerto Rican eyes tell lies” in any context, but once again, that is the shivery magic of our host at play: it all works, and it all works so damn well. Charades is lustful, pious, gentle, violent, desperate, and entirely, utterly inimitable. Keith Zarriello might not be a poet, but he very well may be a poem.

Admittedly, it’s hard for me to find any fault with a record like this that has been such a warm and reliable companion to me through so many of my formative years. Considering that, I’d like to leave you with one last selling point, one entirely removed from any of my own biases: Aaron Paul and Lauren Parsekian remain married to this day, twelve years later, so if you’re out looking for your long and lasting love, start here.


Amber Graci may be found on Instagram at @amber.gray.sea and @amberwavesnc, the latter of which is reserved for her literary and musical endeavors. She may be spotted enjoying music, playing music, and depositing chapbooks of her writings at local venues, bookshops, bars, and homes in the areas within and surrounding Charlotte, North Carolina. She hopes to have more music available in some not-too-distant future at https://amberwaves.bandcamp.com/music.

Broken Record – Routine | Album Review

Power Goth Recordings

I wake to walk my dog, then hop on a Citi Bike to duck and weave my way through four miles of unforgiving New York traffic to get to work. My previous subway commute started to wear me down, usually taking about an hour pending whatever ongoing construction or repairs were happening or if someone had jumped on the tracks. Interruptions were few and far between when I was a kid, though. Taking the train didn’t feel so rote then; I genuinely enjoyed the solace and consistency, the rattle and hum through the tunnels. Now I have neither solace nor consistency, and the fare’s gone up, so the pre-established routine I once appreciated has morphed into something soul-crushing. I might as well spend more money I don’t have on a Citi Bike membership so I can have some joy commuting on nicer days.

I’m 32 and wholeheartedly understand why people have midlife crises. I’d be grateful to have one someday instead of living through one every few years due to my country and the world at large, but I don’t feel like my life has that kind of runway. I don’t think I ever have. I’m not aiming to be all doom and gloom, but everything feels pretty fucked across the board. The majority of people I know are struggling and disconsolate in some way. Those who aren’t mostly stay quiet in their privilege like White Demon, the taunting creature on the cover of Broken Record’s third album, Routine.

Routine understands the tedium of regular oppression. The 30-minute record is a tight, speaker-blown emo album that makes my daily rage feel validated. Vocalist and guitarist Lauren Beecher has a preternatural skill for putting words to the emotions I feel, even immediately on the opener “Drag,” where she sings, “I don’t know if I can keep up / I don’t know if I’m alive.” A grinding bass from Corey Fruin maintains a booming rhythm that urges the listener to keep pushing forward against Beecher’s woes. It is in this dichotomy of defeatist lyrics set to energetic, catchy music in which Broken Record thrive.

No Vacation” pummels with power-pop nihilism. The guitars drip with distortion and grit, yet the melody cuts through with an endless hook that exists in spite of the chorus’s despondency: “It has to get worse before we can rest / It has to get worse / Locked in a cycle forever and yet / It has to get worse.” I loathe how relatable these lyrics are because I feel naked before them. They can align with anything in my life: work, school, relationships, behavioral patterns I fall into, and probably even more that I’ve yet to unearth. Evoking this kind of reflection in art is a challenge in our attention-split world, but Broken Record manage to give me a therapy session in less than two minutes.

In my review of Broken Record’s sophomore album Nothing Moves Me, I implored the band to lean into their slow and heavier side. I’m not going to say they wrote “What Always Happens” explicitly for me, but I’m not not saying that, either. A singular rhythm guitar and Beecher’s vocals introduce the track before drummer Nicholas Danes leads Fruin and guitarist Larson Ross to join the fray in a cathartic, crushing wall of feedback that brings the final third of the song to a transcendent conclusion. Any other band would have taken more than five minutes to achieve this, yet Broken Record execute this movement in a track shorter than the majority of the new Taylor Swift slop.

Aside from second-wave emo reference points like Sunny Day Real Estate, Broken Record aptly fill the void left by the scene’s white whale, Title Fight. “50% Sea” and “Knife” feel like they could stand with the best of Shed. Additionally, by blurring the lines between power-pop, post-hardcore, grunge, and shoegaze, Broken Record prove themselves to be timeless torchbearers of alternative rock music. Nowhere is this more clear than on “Nervous Energy,” Routine’s longest track at four and a half minutes. There is a humble confidence in the musicianship that guides listeners from one note to the next, showing the attention and intentionality that Beecher and co. exacted in the studio under the tutelage of engineer and producer Justin Pizzoferrato. The band wrote an album that is mean, lean, and truly themselves: a unique blend of the music they maintain obvious reverence for.

It would be remiss to not discuss the singular stark note of optimism off Routine. Album closer “A Small Step” ratchets up guitar heroics with soaring leads that underline Beecher’s final points. She sings of individually changing an otherwise unrelenting world, offering a glimpse of hope: “I can’t escape the world around me / but I can try to move it along.” What sticks out, though, is the only repeated refrain on the track: “Forever is whatever / All I need is someone like you by my side / to let me know that I’m all right.” Broken Record craft an album as dark and down as Routine, but choose to end on a message of love. Yes, this is a concept oft repeated, but it is worth noting its placement in the sequencing. blink-182 sings the same sentiment when pining for girls on “Going Away to College.” When Broken Record do it, they’re declaring love is greater than the everyday horrors we have to face.

Although Routine might be a challenging listen due to the material’s logical pessimism, the songs are a reflection of me (and, I imagine, many others) in a broken mirror. While I adore the way these songs sound in melody and tone, as well as the catharsis they deliver, I struggle with the weight of the image they present before me. Genuinely good and worthwhile art does not necessitate no work on the audience’s part, though. Fortunately for me and all their other fans, Broken Record offer comfort, solidarity, and understanding in their indictment of the world.


Joe is an all-purpose creative from Brooklyn, NY. He loves reading, writing, and playing the bass almost as much as he loves his dog. Every now and then, he discovers another reason to love Jimmy Eat World more deeply. Check out all of his work here.

Thanks! I Hate It – Scatterbrain | Album Review

Take This To Heart Records

I haven’t been doing well. Frankly, I don’t think any of us have been. Burnout nips at my heels like a dog. I meet my own bleary gaze in the mirror each morning, blinking until the light hurts my eyes a little less. I follow the same routine, finding some small comfort in its familiarity: mediocre coffee scooped into my French press, damp hair in a towel, concealer and blush pressed into my sheet-marked skin. I pick an album to soundtrack my commute, hesitating between an old favorite and something new. I decide to try the new album. And so goes the day: a series of choices, ever the same, varied only slightly by my responses to them. 

Scatterbrain, the sophomore album from Central California rockers Thanks! I Hate It, speaks directly to the burnout and dissolution we’ve all been wrestling with. Poignant lyrics sung by vocalist Sam Hogan are braided with glittering hooks and immaculate fills, melding the band’s fifth-wave emo sound with sharp insight on navigating millennial adulthood. For the most part, Scatterbrain iterates on the band’s excellent (and under the radar) 2023 LP Lover’s Lane. Throughout the record, guitarists Ryan Jansky and William Loomis ignite the songs with prickly Midwest fireworks while bassist Joel Chandler and drummer Ryan Loomis pack catharsis into every moment of the instrumentals. Their discography is filled with tongue-in-cheek song titles like “Meatwood Flack” and “Disney Bland.” In true emo tradition, they’re goofy and lighthearted names that offer no hint of the emotionally weighty lyrics beneath.  

This theme is continued on Scatterbrain: the opening track is titled “LeatherFACGCE,” a clever mash-up of the fabled Texas Chainsaw Massacre killer and an emo-favorite alternate guitar tuning. An immediately catchy drum groove and tightly winding guitar riff draw the listener in as Sam sings, “Water doesn’t heal everything / But today we can forget about the past / Iced tea and lemonade / You hate it when I try to dig around in your head.” The track speaks of a relationship that the speaker refuses to give up on, even though they acknowledge it’s getting more difficult to do so: it feels one-sided, with Sam singing that, “I’m doing overtime to let you know what’s on my mind / but oxygen gets harder to find.” 

The captivating hooks and energetic, yet honest, lyricism continue onto “Sunrise Over Mt. Doom,” which is one of my favorite tracks on the album. I love Lord of the Rings (Aragorn fans, rise up), and on first listen, the title of the song immediately got my attention. Over classic pop-punk chord progressions and melodic earworms, Sam admits that they’ve been whiling the days away unproductively. However, this honest confession is tinged with hope, looking ahead to a brighter future despite the current bleakness.

I spend my time on the wrong things
Mostly unemployed
I wait to see what tomorrow brings
Oh what else can I avoid?
And I know I know
It’s not gonna last forever
And I know I know
It gets better.

In The Lord of the Rings, Mount Doom is the volcano in Mordor where the One Ring was forged. The parallel of the song title is clear: Mt. Doom is a dark and hopeless place, full of foreboding, but a sunrise shining above it is a symbol of hope. Samwise says to Frodo in The Two Towers: “But in the end, it's only a passing thing, this shadow. Even darkness must pass. A new day will come. And when the sun shines, it'll shine out the clearer.” And so both Sams are right: it will get better from here.

As I’ve gotten older, I’ve learned how intertwined boundaries are with peace. I am a (mostly) recovered people pleaser, but getting used to putting my health and time first has been a journey. I still have to mentally work myself up to saying no to someone, even when I know I’m burned out. On lead single “Butterfly Tattoo Effect,” T!IHI tackle this subject, commenting that “I don’t want to waste time / I don’t want to ruin my life.” Saying yes to everything and everyone is more destructive than anything – if all your time is spoken for by others, your life isn’t really your own anymore, it’s theirs. Sam sings that “I never felt the future / Mattered till I got a chance to make it myself / So I say / Oh well / For once, I learned how to say no.” As I traverse my third decade of living and make my future, I’ve finally learned to say no too. 

Sometimes, though, setting those boundaries leads to resentment from people who liked you only because you said yes to them. The album’s closing track, “Tonight’s the Night You Fight Your Dad,” is an honest examination of such a relationship: Sam admits that, “I think you like me better when I’m being a sponge.” Standing up for yourself to a family member or friend is never easy. It’s a relief to passively take criticism or arguments instead of pushing back. Honesty can feel like you’re a salmon battling upstream, facing a waterfall that threatens to crush you. But living itself is a relentless experience, and peace exists only because it is the opposite of conflict. Facing these difficult conversations can be done graciously, and loving people with whom you disagree is a part of life. Sam notes, “I still like being around you / I don’t let it bother me too much / I’m careful in the way that I’m receiving your love.” Sometimes, self-preservation can look like holding the ones you love at arm’s length.

Later on Scatterbrain, the energy briefly mellows on “Detractor Supply.” A soft and thoughtful opening leads into a satisfyingly dense atmosphere, building the end into a sudden explosion of circle pit energy – the band fakes a quiet ending, then blasts into a joyous chorus of gang vocals and furiously precise drumming from Ryan Loomis. “Break it up and break it down / We’re gonna turn this life around / There’s no more wishing, no more wanting / No more patience, no more longing.” It’s a powerful and emotive moment: my skin pricks with goosebumps and I yell along to the lyrics with all the air in my lungs. T!IHI prove they can move the listener with more than just poetry. From razor-sharp tempo changes to tawny harmonies, the band communicates emotional highs and lows throughout the entire album. Not only is it gorgeous, it’s damn impressive, too. 

It’s supposed to rain in a few hours. The sky is ominously cast in deep grey, and I can smell the water on the breeze. My shoulders feel a little less heavy. Perhaps there is some relief in routine: one foot in front of the other, a series of choices to make. Even the familiar can be sacred. Scatterbrain is a relatable and beautifully comforting ode to being human and finding the light of hope in our darkest seasons. I close my eyes and let the first few raindrops brush my face.


Britta Joseph is a musician and artist who, when she isn’t listening to records or deep-diving emo archives on the internet, enjoys writing poetry, reading existential literature, and a good iced matcha. You can find her on Instagram @brittajoes.

The Beths – Straight Line Was A Lie | Album Review

Anti

It’s no secret, at least to The Beths, that human experience isn’t linear. The New Zealand pop rockers are far from the first to make this observation: Buddhist philosophy talks about Samsara, the cycle of birth, death, and existence that’s fueled by desire. Also called “the wheel of suffering,” Samsara can theoretically be escaped. But don’t ask me, or The Beths, how!

The band’s fourth album, Straight Line Was A Lie, kicks off with the title track, a treatise that hinges on the admission, “Guess I’ll take the long way / ‘Cause every way’s the long way.” Crunchy guitars circle around a verse and bridge; no chorus, just a recursive mantra. The fuzz gives way to sweetness on “Mosquitoes,” the second track, showcasing the soft side of frontwoman Elizabeth Stokes’ voice and songwriting. Throughout the song, she reflects vividly on a flood that wrecked her favorite local creek, grappling with impermanence and loss in the process. However, the reflective moment soon gives way to the up-tempo drums and thrumming bass of “No Joy,” a nod to The Beths’ power-pop past. On it goes throughout the track: fervor and tenderness, slow and fast, light and dark, back and forth, around and around. Indeed, as the album’s title forecasts, there is absolutely no straight line to be had here—and in light of life’s complexities, why would there be?

It’s not easy, making sense of *gestures to everything* All This. I won’t waste too many words talking about how much sorrow there is and how futile it all feels. Everyone I know—I am not even exaggerating—is reckoning with some kind of impossible misery right now, even if it’s just the struggle of surviving in this nightmare country. As for myself—well, I’m trying to move forward, to move on, but my life feels like it ended in 2023, and that cruel year just won’t loosen its awful grip on me. In fact, it’s lately felt like the more I thrash, the tighter it digs in. Perhaps if I knew how to loosen up, lighten up, I could shake off some of the pain. Three steps forward, two back, instead of the other way around. Salvation comes from letting go; otherwise, you’re stuck. Like the title track says: “I thought I was getting better, but I’m back to where I started / and the straight line was a circle, yeah the straight line was a lie.”

It makes sense that to be light and free, holding onto nothing and no one, would solve this problem of suffering. Like, I get why the Buddha said that. Unfortunately, it just doesn’t feel practical for me, a person who loves to get attached to everything.

In the album’s penultimate song, “Ark of the Covenant,” Stokes reckons with her dark side over brooding chords and an urgent drum tempo. “If I go digging, I’ll never stop,” she frets, worried that introspection will only lead to deeper misery. Is there a way to excavate these cursed artifacts safely, to sap them of their power? 

In the wake of The Beths’ beloved third album, Expert In a Dying Field, Stokes was prescribed antidepressants. She sought a way out of life’s difficulties; what happened instead was that she stalled out: unfulfilled and unable to write music as creatively as she had before. Slowly, though, she and her bandmates pushed through, and the process itself (and all its extrapolations into their personal relationships) became the subject matter. “So you need the metal in your blood,” a chorus of background vocals chants in the album’s second single, “Metal.” 

Stokes said she and the band intentionally avoided keyboards on Straight Line, a move that proves crucial to the album’s success. With her bubblegum voice and the band’s easygoing melodies, an Alvvays pastiche could have been an obvious route, but, as illustrated throughout the album, the band wasn’t interested in taking any shortcuts. Instead, they turn the dial up on bouncy bass riffs, lively drums, and chiming guitar tones that almost sound like a harpsichord on “Roundabout.” We get caught in these recursive riptides, yes, but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t press forward, continue hacking through the jungle. 

Grit is the key to Straight Line Was A Lie. “I wanna ride my bike in the rain / I wanna fly my kite in the hurricane,” Stokes sings in the middle of the record on “Til My Heart Stops.” So you found yourself back where you started, or stuck in a rainstorm. What are you going to do about it? Perhaps for some of us, the response to suffering isn’t to fade out, but to double down. And that doesn’t have to mean the toxic kind of clinging that fuels Samsara; conversely, it might mean deciding what’s actually worth saving in the midst of life’s wreckage. 

Nowhere is this wreckage more evident than “Mother, Pray For Me,” a crushing choice for a pre-album single and my favorite song on the record. It’s not easy to sit with the paradox of a loving but difficult relationship, much less put it into words, but The Beths have done it here. “I cried the whole time writing it,” Stokes says, though in the spirit of the album, her persistence paid off. Softly underscored by organ chords, she offers up six verses and a bridge asking for the seemingly impossible. Despite the song’s title and mantra, it’s not her own salvation that she seeks. The bridge goes:

I called off the search
For evidence of an after
Decided I'm fine without
Forever is this right now
But one day, if you arrive
Just send me a small sign
I don't need the proof of place
Just tell me you got there safe

If there’s a heaven, a nirvana, it’s in what we share with those we love. It’s not a destination we arrive at; it’s a prayer we say for each other again and again. 

Before her final entreaty to her mother’s intercession, Stokes confesses, “I never know what to say anyway.” I disagree. I think she’s hit the nail on the head.


Katie Hayes is a music writer and karaoke superstar in Austin, Texas. She is from there, but between 2010 and now, also lived in Lubbock, TX, Portland, OR, and a camper. Her life is a movie in which her bearded dragon Pancake is the star. You can check out her Substack here, and some of her other writing here. She’s writing a book about growing up alongside her favorite band, Paramore.

Aren’t We Amphibians – Parade! Parade! | Album Review

PNWK Records

It took five years of living in New York for me to finally make it to the ever-elusive Trans-Pecos, but one show there was all I needed to understand the venue’s popularity. The 250-cap room is situated on the border of Brooklyn and Queens – technically part of Ridgewood – and sits right next to a Vietnamese restaurant, only a stone’s throw from the Halsey St. stop on the L train. Last year, I ventured from my apartment on a cold November night to catch a now-otherworldly bill of emotional rock bands, including the local rockstars in better living., Japanese act ANORAK!, legendary New Jersey headliner Ogbert the Nerd, and an introduction to the California-based rock outfit Aren’t We Amphibians. As if that lineup wasn’t enough, that gig was the cap to a weekend packed with fantastic shows: I caught Cloud Nothings and Equipment tearing up Baby’s All Right on Friday, then watched saturdays at your place headline Market Hotel the night after. The pure excitement led me to create a playlist called “Last Weekend Changed Me” and, as emo music often does, I was changed.

Aren’t We Amphibians have found a lot of love in the DIY circuit throughout their short tenure as a band, thanks to their infectious energy and reliable output of consistently great music. Formed by vocalist/guitarist Joshua Talbot and brothers Brandon and Tyler Cunningham on drums and bass respectively, the San-Diego trio has put out two EPs and a couple of splits, including one earlier this year with awakebutstillinbed, california cousins, and your arms are my cocoon. Give it a handful of years, and I guarantee this split will be considered a classic entry in a genre with a long lineage of historic four-way splits.

All of this is to say my hopes were quite high when rumors of a 2025 release for Aren’t We Amphibians’ debut full-length started bubbling up, and it finally arrived in the form of Parade! Parade!. The ten-track record sees the group move forward with effective midsong tempo switches and Talbot’s high register belting the most depressing lyrics you can imagine, this time with even more anthemic sing-alongs. Take the opening track, “Rock, Etc.,” which initially paints a portrait of a morbid future as the first lyric lays out, “This time next year, I won’t be still around.” However, the track blossoms into a triumphant declaration of “I’m here right now,” alongside hard-hitting guitars and trumpets, transforming a moment of helplessness into a symbol of hope within four simple words.

Throughout this record, there are multiple instances where Talbot writes lyrics that practically beg to be screamed along to in rooms full of people who are also, for lack of a better term, going through it. Talbot cries out, “I’ve said a thousand times that I never want to be anything but small” in the track “532.” There’s also the incredibly sorrowful cut “The Hallway,” which kicks off with a slower guitar passage before progressing into an explosive guitar pattern alongside the repeated lyric “I think I’d be better off if I never existed at all.” Now that’s what I call emo.

It’s not only the lyricism that feels incredibly raw and heartbreaking: many of the instrumental choices have a sense of constructed impulsivity to them. While they might seem abrupt on first pass, there’s a free-flowing ease between the hallmark time signature switches in the lead single “Dunce Hat,” almost like Aren’t We Amphibians are identifying new paths of communicating what needs to be said in real time. This high level of musicianship makes it easy for the group to pull it off multiple times without ever feeling so far out of left field that the listener gets disoriented. There’s also a personal favorite, “Forgiving Jeff,” which boasts some amazing guitars shifting from throttling to methodical at the drop of a hat, all accompanying the ultra-earnest mantra “Take this to heart,” which I have found myself screaming every time I throw this song on.

Throughout the album, Talbot articulates the pain of feeling stuck while everyone around you seems to be growing up. His ability to shift from singing to passionate cries to flat-out screams, multiple times in the same song, works in tandem with the ever-evolving instrumental passages. A brilliant example of this can be found in “Family on 6,” which erupts into a straight-up screamo passage, accompanied by an explosion of guitars and drums, as Talbot screams “I never learn from my mistakes” at the top of his lungs. It’s easily one of the craziest moments in an already fast-paced record.

What keeps this album glued together, both in terms of sonic and thematic value, is the idea of the parade. The first bits that we hear come from the horns in the opening track, and they make bolder appearances on tracks such as the laid-back “Bookworm,” where the band pairs the brass alongside some acoustic guitar passages. On the flipside, the album’s second single, “This Is Teamwork!,” sees the trumpets placed right before a hardcore-inspired breakdown. It’s always fantastic to see an emo band put together more of these non-traditional instruments into a record, especially when its use becomes a cornerstone of what the project represents.

The real centerpiece of Parade! Parade! comes at the end with the de facto title track “Parade,” cued up by a (shocker) parade-style intro. The song launches into a powerhouse guitar riff, with lyrics that focus on turning everything you have been through into a celebration of the person you are now. The group pulls through with a slower passage as Talbot sings “When the street is empty / after the parade / just take it all in / and feel everything,” extending an invitation to be a human again throughout the suffering. 

These parades that Aren’t We Amphibians speak of might not be that far away from you. While one might not catch a line of countless people cheering and screaming to the sound of music in the streets, you can certainly find them in music venues large and small. There’s something about the safety of being surrounded by people who all have the same love of music that brings you back to life after navigating through the hostile environment outside of the venue. At the end of the opening track, a radio broadcast says the words, "Let's talk about rock and roll, let’s talk about concerts, let’s talk about banging your head,” almost like a personal invitation to the celebration. We’re all going through it, so you may as well recognize everything you’ve overcome. If you are ever in doubt, take yourself out to the gig! There’s a chance you could be changed like I was back in November of last year.

The optimism throughout the pain is what keeps Parade! Parade! from being a downtrodden, melancholic emo project and instead cements it with a nuanced mood. There’s hope throughout all of the craziness, no matter what you are going through. There’s a joy that comes with being in the same room as a bunch of strangers who all have the same love of music, and we certainly feel it all once we step outside of those rooms. It’s hard to progress without hope, so why not celebrate all you have accomplished whenever you can? 


Samuel Leon (they/he) is a Brooklyn-based performance photographer, playwright, and retired performer. Sam writes plays about music but not musicals. Sam doesn’t like using the internet, but they will if they have to. If you are even remotely close to Brooklyn and want Sam to make you look cool on camera, hit them up on @sleonpics.