Half A Decade of Speaking It Into Existence: An Interview with pulses.

On It Wasn’t Supposed To Be Like This, the Virginia-based post-hardcore act pulses. tackle the idea that we must make the most of difficult circumstances, that those hardships make us who we are and ultimately can lead to great things. I’ve never shied away from speaking about how pivotal pulses. were to my introduction to DIY, leading me to a music community that I’ve been able to foster through them. Over the past five years, I’ve been lucky enough to grow close to this band and celebrate their impact along with other fans, but around this time back in 2020, as an unforeseen pandemic was altering our lives forever, all I knew was a single called “Louisiana Purchase” and the album it was released on. 

To celebrate five years of Speak It Into Existence, I sat down with pulses. frontmen Matt Burridge and Caleb Taylor, drummer Kevin Taylor, and bassist David Crane to discuss the album's creation and what makes it so special to not only the band but also those who found them through it. 

This interview has been edited for length and clarity. 


SWIM: How are you guys doing?

MATT: Solid. We practiced. David tracked some stuff. It's been cool.

CALEB: It's been a day.

KEVIN: [Laughs]

SWIM: Yeah, I worked earlier today, so I’m pretty fried.

Thank you for being here! I had this kind of epiphany earlier this week where I wanted to start doing these interviews, and I was like, “Well, pulses. is kind of where I started getting into my DIY interests and Speak It Into Existence (specifically), so it makes sense to go back and revisit the album.” 

Before we dove into the album discussion, I was curious what everyone had been listening to first.

KEVIN: It's funny. I feel like I'm not listening to anything. It's the weirdest time where I'll listen to stuff in really quick bursts, and then I won't listen to stuff for like three days. It's odd. 

SWIM: Yeah, I always have a weird complex like, “I’m not listening to enough music right now and definitely not enough new music,” so it’s nice to hear that other people are the exact same way. Nobody’s listening to new music constantly; it’s just whenever it happens.  

KEVIN: Yeah, Sleigh Bells had a record that came out that was good. Scowl’s record is pretty good. The new PinkPantheress song is really good. 

SWIM: [Heaven knows] was so fucking good, I’m excited for more from her!

KEVIN: Listening to the [Callous] Daoboys singles, they're all pretty good. The new Skrillex album was pretty good. 

MATT: That new Deafheaven is really good. I feel like every year and a half, when I'm having writer's block, I watch all the “making of  John Bellion" videos that he does, ‘cause he used to film the entire process of making a song and then edit it down to like ten minutes or whatever, and those get me feeling creative. His music is either terrible to me or really good. 

I discovered Model/Actriz today. I'm really late on that, but they're really good. It's like dance-punk, post-punk. The new singles sound like live band versions of deadmau5 songs. It's crazy. 

CALEB: Yeah, I've been lacking on newer stuff. I get overwhelmed pretty quickly with things, and lately, my time listening to music has been while I'm working or doing something else. So sometimes I'd rather give my focus on new music, like give actual focus on it and check it out. Especially if I'm working, I don't want to listen to new music to analyze it. I want to listen to something that makes me feel good, because I feel terrible while working. [Laughs]

Recently, I've been revisiting and re-listening to things I may have missed or previously listened to to gain new context. I listen to the first Foals record a lot. 

One I revisited that I haven't listened to in a while was Bad Rabbit's second album.

SWIM: They’re very good! They’re super underrated. 

CALEB: Absolutely. I love their first album a lot, and that stays in rotation. American Love and their EP, too. 

MATT: Relient K is one that I just saw pop up! One of my hottest pop-punk/emo takes is that Mmhmm is one of the best pop-punk records of all-time. 

SWIM:Be My Escape” has one of the best pre-choruses in punk rock music. 

CALEB: Yeah. The other day, while I was working, I listened to four of their albums. I went in reverse order. I started with Forget and Not Slow Down. That one's a sleeper. I actually like that album a lot. 

MATT: I was going to say, you’re a Relient K oldhead. [Laughs]

David: I'm going back through The Acacia Strain discography. Slow Decay is honestly one of their best albums, and it's a pretty recent release. Some of their back catalog is really good, too. 

MATT: It's like beatdown, fucking super heavy.

David: Humanity's Last Breath is also really good. They just put out a new song

MATT: You’re the metal representation in our listening. [Laughs]

SWIM: Yeah, gotta keep things balanced. 

SWIM: So, somehow, Speak It Into Existence is turning five this week. 

David: That five years was fast as hell.

[All laugh]

SWIM: Time is a really fucked up vaccuum, especially since Covid. I think everybody who listened to that album when it came out is having a lot of feelings about it, but how are you guys feeling about that album turning five?

MATT: It’s weird. I feel like I don't listen to it, but I need to. I'll probably listen to it on the day or around the day, because I usually do that with each of our releases as they gain a year. I like parts of it more than others. I remember when we put out Speak Less, I was like, “I don't have a favorite of the two,” and then now I'm like, “Oh, I like Speak Less way more.” But I still like them both. Then there are a lot of people like you, that we've met on Twitter, who found us through [Speak It Into Existence] and have become really close with us off of that. So I hold it in a special place ‘cause it did things for us, but I don't listen to it much anymore, and we don't play a lot of it ‘cause it was super technical for all of us.

SWIM: Yeah, a lot of it is very shreddy. [Laughs]

MATT: Yeah, and trying to multitask doing that is hard, so we play the hits and that’s it. 

CALEB: It's funny, I don't remember a lot of it. I feel like I have pushed out so much of that time, because we were working on it, primarily, my senior year of college, and that was not a good year. [Laughs]

I still remember when we put it out; I had a lab assignment due the same day, and I was working on it up until like midnight. I was just like, “All right, fuck this. I'm just gonna take whatever grade, I don't feel like working on this anymore. Let me celebrate the album release.” I still passed that class, and that was the last thing I needed to graduate, so yay for me, but definitely a weird time. Obviously, I'm always gonna be incredibly proud of it. I like a lot of the songs for it. Like Matt was saying, I like where it got us. I feel like that was the thing that established us in a lot of ways. I feel like bouquet. established us in our local scene, and then it got out somewhat, but Speak It Into Existence is where things started to expand past the local scene, and we were really starting to do some things. Still proud of it.

MATT: Even with the pandemic and everything, I think that might have helped it, honestly, ‘cause it was like within a month and a half of it starting. 

CALEB: Yeah, nobody had shit to do.

MATT: Yeah, and nobody was dropping other than like a couple bands, but a lot of people were postponing their stuff, and we were like, “We've waited too long,” because that record took so long to make.

CALEB: “It's not like we have any marketing backing behind it or anything, so we can release whenever we want to.” [Laughs]

SWIM: Yeah, I remember around that time, before listening to “Louisiana Purchase” and this album, so much of my listening was just commercial music/non-DIY. It took my oldest brother and my friend Jack being like, “Yo, check out this single,” and that really was the start of it. I remember thinking, “Oh, these guys did this all by themselves. How do you do that? What is this process?” I recall that being the thing that stuck out for me. Hearing a song like “Louisiana Purchase” and just how professional it sounded to me – how polished – and my mind breaking a little. The fact that people can do that without being on a major label.

MATT: That's cool, because I feel like you and Will [Full Blown Meltdown] are like the two people that I know that are the most on top of DIY music now. So it's cool that we were kind of the start of it. 

SWIM: Was he one of those early adopters as well?

MATT: I knew [Will] before he was doing FBM, because Will was Sam's brother's friend from high school. So, I think we posted that we were in Frederick or something, and then he messaged them and said, “Yo, I'm literally in this hair salon with my wife and she's getting her hair cut, come by.” I met him and we literally just sat there and talked. We were writing Speak Less at the time, and I was just like, “Oh yeah, we're putting out some stuff soon that sounds like Orchid and Satia. Then we kind of bonded over that. Now, I always joke with Sam every time I interact with him, I'm just like, “It's so funny to me that I talk to him more than you do now, and you’ve known him since you were a child.” [Laughs]

SWIM: Will is definitely the DIY hype man. He’s the kind of guy you want talking about your stuff. [Laughs]

MATT: Yeah, he's all over it. But that's cool, ‘cause we recorded it right here. Literally, I was sitting in this exact spot with my laptop. 

CALEB: This was a guest bedroom at the time, too. So, there was a bed here.

MATT: We would finish at like three or four in the morning, [Caleb] would go upstairs ‘cause he still lived here at the time, and I would sleep on that bed that was in here. [Laughs]

SWIM: What’s it like having that connective tissue still to all of your recordings? Being in such a different place as a band, five years removed from that album, and doing it in the same space?

MATT: I don't think about it much, because it looks different in here now, you know what I mean? It's Kevin and Caleb’s house. I don't know if they think about it more that way, but it's a different room to me now. 

KEVIN: It's very odd. I don't really think about it much. Not that I live here right now, but we've been here for like, what, 20 years, Caleb?

CALEB: I think we moved here in 2002, yeah. 

SWIM: It’s been your folks’ home for that long.

KEVIN: Exactly. I guess it's just another piece of me growing up here. It doesn't register to me as a difference for the band. It's just like, “I used to have a twin-size bed and now I have a queen-size bed,” you know? You don't think about those changes, so I feel like it kind of stays the same.

SWIM: This is The pulses. Studio and it keeps evolving. 

KEVIN: We shot “Untitled” in here, from the bouquet. era. We shot parts of “Bold New Taste” in here. We'd done those live stream recordings, but for me, they're all like somehow in a different room each time, but also in the same space. Different pieces of the same puzzle. It's weird. 

CALEB: I think it grows with us. Funny enough, I was tracking drums for new Followship music, so that was the first time I was recording them here, and it was so funny, ‘cause they were somewhat geeking out. Like, “Oh shit, this is where y'all recorded the ‘I Drink Juice’ video! This is right here! Oh, this is where y'all did this!” And I'm like, “Yeah.” [Laughs] 

Again, I don't really think about it in that way, ‘cause this is just the basement I grew up in. I was telling [Followship] even, “This is my whole life, my whole childhood, everything was here in this basement,” you know? They walked in and were just like, “Oh, you got the Rock Band drums graveyard.” We had all the New Year's parties with kids on the block here. It's just grown with us, and now it's the studio.

MATT: It's every room down here, too. You even go into the bathroom and you're like, “Oh my God! This is the bathroom from ‘The Message Is Clear’ video!” [Laughs]

SWIM: It’s becoming a pulses. museum. 

CALEB: Honestly.

SWIM: I always mix up the timeline, because when I think of pulses., it’s obviously the current lineup with Matt in it, but what was the timeline with Matt joining and Speak It Into Existence coming out?  

MATT: I joined in 2018, so [pulses.] put out “The Appetizer” and “Jecht Shot” like three months after I joined. They had me go ahead and record a second guitar on “Jecht Shot.” Not for “The Appetizer,” but I'm on “Jecht Shot.” That's my first thing, but it's just guitar. Then we started working on the album and didn't put anything out, just played a lot of shows. I didn't do vocals on that record. The lineup had changed before the album came out. So I think that's why a lot of people get confused with it, ‘cause we put it out and it was like, “Okay, but this isn't me, but I'm gonna be doing it from now on.” Since then, it's just been the four of us doing everything.

CALEB: I remember we had a number of songs already written for the album when Matt joined. 

MATT: It was “Sometimes Y,” “Exist Warp Breaks,” “Mount Midoriyama.” “Olivia Wild” you had started. “Don't Say Anything, Just RT,” I think you had started.

Graduation Day” [too]. 

KEVIN: That one's old. 

MATT: Yeah. I just added parts to all of those. Then we wrote “Plastiglomerate” and “Louisiana Purchase” first. Which is wild, ‘cause they ended up being the singles. The title track was gonna be for Speak Less, and then we were like, “This will be a good opener. We'll make it longer and fill it out.” Then we wrote “Good Vibes Only (Zuckerberg Watchin’)” because we needed a pop song. It was almost the whole thing they had the instrumentals at least started for, then we wrote a couple core ones together.

SWIM: You touched on it a little bit, but how do you think lockdown and Covid affected the album, how it was released, and people’s relationship to it?

MATT: I think people attached to it because they were just not doing anything, so that helped. I think that helped it spread a little bit, because, realistically, if it wasn't Covid, we would've played a bunch of local shows and it would've probably not had as strong of an initial connection with people.

KEVIN: Didn't [Dance Gavin Dance] have an album that came out later? 

CALEB: Yeah. That was the whole thing. [Laughs]

MATT: Later that month, I think. 

KEVIN: Yeah, ‘cause we were trying to beat it. We had to drop it before…

CALEB: Afterburner.

SWIM: Oh, god. 

KEVIN: Yeah, because if we dropped it after, no one was gonna care. So we rushed it to get the album out before them, and I honestly think that helped a lot.

SWIM: Do you regret not having a song in Spanish on Speak It Into Existence?

[All Laugh]

KEVIN: Honestly, I'm glad we don't for a number of reasons.

CALEB: If we did, we would actually have a native speaker on it.

MATT: If we did it now, we would get a feature that speaks Spanish. Andres or somebody who speaks Spanish. [Laughs]

SWIM: Yeah, you have no shortage of connections who could do that. 

MATT: Not trying to Google translate my way through a verse.

KEVIN: As we've always said, there's just such a tumultuous relationship with that fucking band and I do think the fact that we dropped it before [Afterburner] was helpful. I feel like people listened to [Speak It Into Existence] and had their moments with it. Then [Afterburner] came out and the fact that it was weaker for a lot of people, they were like, “Oh, well if you don't like that shit, listen to Speak It Into Existence!” Then people suggested us more, and it got around that way. 

MATT: People still liked that genre, so there was a fan base for it. Whether we were part of it or not. 

KEVIN: Yeah, there wasn't any animosity. 

MATT: Yeah, it wasn't as big of a deal then, but I still remember when we started getting reviews, one of the big ones was like, “Oh, ‘Exist Warp Brakes’ is like ‘Don't Tell Dave’ ‘cause it's like a funk thing!” And we were just like… stupid! [Laughs]

KEVIN: Yeah. “Dumb, but we’re just gonna let it rock,” because at the time, it wasn’t as annoying yet.

CALEB: I still remember back then, we were already trying to move off from it and were feeling that internally as the record was coming out. Especially because of how much time passed between us finishing it and when it came out, it was like, “I'm a different person now.” I think that album had the most time between us recording it and it actually coming out. That was the first album that we tracked ourselves. We started tracking it at [Matt’s] place. 

MATT: Yeah, at my old apartment in West Virginia. 

CALEB: I think we started with tracking guitars for “Louisiana Purchase” and “Exist Warp Brakes.” It was during that snowstorm, so it was like January 2019. And then we didn't finish tracking it all the way through until August?

MATT: We were almost done, but we were like, “We have to put out something,” so we dropped “Louisiana Purchase” in December. We were done, but I know we were waiting on two features that took a while. [Laughs] 

We finished around October, then, because it was before the tour.

CALEB: Well, the tour was in September.

MATT: Oh, I guess it was August. It’s been over five years now, I can't fucking remember. 

KEVIN: I wasn’t going to comment on any time thing, because I don't fucking remember. [Laughs]

MATT: I thought I remembered touching up things, but maybe I'm just thinking ‘cause we were writing Speak Less at the same time, and we were still doing that.

CALEB: I was still editing things, and I'm pretty sure we did one of those things where we got the master back for the record and then we put it out like two weeks later, which is something you shouldn't do, but we did it like twice. Three times, probably. I'm pretty sure we did that for bouquet. Especially ‘cause at that point it didn't matter. We were just a local band. I think we did it for Speak Less, too. Anyway, to go back to the original point. [Laughs] 

We were in a different headspace. We were already writing Speak Less, so by the time Speak It Into Existence came out, people were like, “Oh, y'all wanted to do this sound. It's like Swancore,” and I already started to move away from wanting to do that, by like 2018, 2019. But I'm not gonna get rid of songs, we still like those songs. I’m still happy with it. I don’t know, it's interesting. [Laughs]

SWIM: I think some people might be under the impression that when bands write albums it’s like, ‘Okay, we’re going to sit in a room, we’re going to bang out these eight to twelve songs, and it’s all written at the same time,’ and I think especially in DIY spaces and music creation in general, you guys are pulling from different places, seeing what works. So, you’re very different people for different songs, rather than like an entire album.    

MATT: Yeah. I mean a band with a label and a budget, it's like, ‘Okay, we're gonna take two months and go write and record this record.’ We can't do that. We get together once a week and write songs. Luckily for future things, it's been going very fast recently, which has been really cool. But yeah, Speak It Into Existence and Speak Less took such a long time ‘cause we were just chipping away at it. Then recording takes even longer, ‘cause you can't just take two weeks or a month and sit in the studio. 

CALEB: Even as an example: today, we were tracking a song for bass, and it's like, “Oh, we got X amount of songs we want to do,” and then this one song took like three or four hours to track. It's like, “Well, that's it for the day, we'll figure out another day we can get together next where people can take time off.” You're gonna spend eight hours a day, like a normal job, in the studio each day. It'll be like, “We'll come back to this tomorrow!” And it's like, “No, I'll see you in a week and a half. Maybe.” This is the first time we've seen David in like two months, ‘cause you know, life happens. 

SWIM: You gotta prioritize music over those fires, David. Priorities.

[All laugh]

MATT: No, but it's been cool now. I think we're in a groove right now, which is nice. It takes a long time and a lot of work to make an album, and I think you’re bound to be – by the time it's coming out – a little bit over it. Especially in a DIY band, because it takes so long.

CALEB: But then also when it comes out, and then people actually respond to it well, then it gets re-contextualized. It’s a weird thing. I saw this very recently again, where somebody was mad at a band for being like, “I don't like this anymore!” You can still like it, but they're a person too, even if they created it! 

I know going into the release, I was like, “I like this, but I'm changing as a person. This represents who I was a year ago, and I feel disconnected from it.” But then, when it came out, people started liking it, we started playing the songs live, and I was like, ‘Okay, now I have re-contextualized it all. I love this.’ Especially particular songs. I will always love playing “Louisiana Purchase.” I'll always love playing “Exist Warp Brakes.” So, all that hurt I had prior is gone now for that aspect of things.

SWIM: That makes a lot of sense. Any lasting thoughts on the album turning five? Anything you want to throw out there?

CALEB: I'm glad that we still exist five years later, you know? That's always something to be grateful for. Speak It Into Existence was named after that, in a way. We said we were gonna do a second record, so we're gonna hold ourselves to it and we're gonna make it happen.

It Wasn't Supposed To Be Like This is also, in a way, a statement of, “We're still existing, we're still creating music, and we're grateful to do that.” You can take the title in a positive or a negative way. We weren't supposed to start this band in 2015 and still be going 10 years later off of nothing, really. I'm grateful to still be at it and still be feeling even more inspired than ever before.

MATT: You got any plugs, Kevin? You're usually the plug man.

KEVIN: I don't really have a whole lot of plugs. In terms of Speak It Into Existence, it's still out on vinyl, still got CDs. I want to do another tape run, but money, you know. So, outside of that, we're working on new music. We're working on old new music and then we're working on new new music. So old, new music should come out sometime this year. New, new music should come out next year, most likely. 

CALEB: And then new versions of old music, in a live way, will come even sooner–

KEVIN: In the form of a live album that we did celebrating 10 years of a band with friends and shit. In the form of possibly a DVD, if I can figure that out.

MATT: Oh, I didn't even know you were gonna do that!

KEVIN: So, there's your scoop. [Laughs]

SWIM: Nice! Well, I got the exclusive one, thank you!

KEVIN: Always. Every interview has to have an exclusive drop.

That's about it. Got a couple of shows. They're fests, they're far apart.

MATT: We're spending all this time on new music. So, festivals, that’s what we got.

SWIM: Well, as a fan and someone who found you guys through Speak It Into Existence, thank you for that album. Love that you guys are still here and doing it. I appreciate y’all coming on for this first interview!

KEVIN: Absolutely, thanks for having us.

CALEB: It's fun to talk shit over a mic.

[All laugh]

SWIM: Love you guys, thank you!


Ciara Rhiannon (she/her) is a pathological music lover writing out of a nebulous location somewhere in the Pacific Northwest within close proximity of her two cats. She consistently appears on most socials as @rhiannon_comma, and you can read more of her musical musings over at rhiannoncomma.substack.com.

Avery Friedman – New Thing | Album Review

Audio Antihero

Growing up, my brother would record jam bands in our basement, which meant that I often found myself accompanying him to Guitar Center, where he’d spend what felt like hours looking at cables. To keep myself entertained during these trips, I’d walk around the main showroom and watch guys shred. To me, shredding was the coolest thing you could do with a guitar; it was so fast and so loud, I thought that surely there was no better way to exhibit one’s mastery of the instrument. Then, one day, while jumping around YouTube, I discovered Jeff Buckley and realized that I was wrong. The way Buckley played the guitar was way cooler than shredding. The sound when he played just wrapped itself around you, it was incredible. It didn’t matter that his guitar playing wasn’t particularly loud or fast; I knew then that what I was listening to was the pinnacle of what someone could do on the guitar, and it totally changed how I thought about the instrument. 

As I listened to “Into,” the first track on Avery Friedman’s debut album, New Thing, I was reminded a lot of Buckley’s playing. I’m not saying that this is a one-for-one comparison—I doubt that we’ll ever see another Jeff Buckley—but in approach and technique, the way things are given space to ring out, the feeling behind the notes, I was hearing so much that reminded me of him. The track serves as a fitting introduction to the excellent guitar playing featured throughout the record, both in other Buckley-esque moments like the intro to “Flowers Fell” and on songs like “Biking Standing” where a more contemporary indie approach is taken. It’s all just so good. 

For a more specific example of what got me fired up about the guitars, let’s take a look at the song “Finger Painting.” The track starts with Friedman singing over nice-sounding electric guitar arpeggios, with a subtle acoustic joining about forty seconds in, adding open chords that complement each arpeggio change. This all sounds great, I’m listening, loving how smooth and in the pocket the playing is, and then we get to the second verse. At this point, Friedman adds a third guitar, a lead that’s awash in what I think is reverb and flanger, mirroring the main vocals and building to a climax that blew me away. The way this third guitar oscillates between perfectly following the lead vocal’s rhythm and falling just a bit out of step is perfect, and it adds so much to the song without doing all that much on paper. It’s one of those things where if you just looked at a tab of it, I’m sure it wouldn’t seem that hard to play, but to do it with that feeling and that rhythm, it’s awe-inspiring. In the last minute of the song, all these layers that have been building on top of each other fully come together and then blast forward into a conclusion that’s absolutely sublime.   

After listening through the first few tracks of New Thing, I thought that I had a pretty good handle on what to expect vocals-wise for the rest of the album: a cool, understated delivery with light modulation that sets a vibe without being too forceful. Then, I get to “Photo Booth,” and I’m just about knocked over by this much less obscured presentation of Friedman’s voice that punches its way to the front of the mix, effortlessly sliding into a high register as she sings “Give you a little look / Truth or dare pupils.” It’s not so different that you’d think it’s a new person singing, but the change both in delivery and production really pulled me in and helped me realize just how good her voice is. “Biking Standing” is another song where we see this more raw version of Friedman’s vocals, giving the track a particularly intimate feel. Unobscured like this, the quality of her voice is undeniable, and it creates a strong foundation for the addition of harmonies and vocal layering in the song’s back half, elevating it and making it one of my favorites on the record.  

With so many vocal modes at play, it highlights that when we’re hearing something, it’s an intentional choice rather than something done out of necessity; what we have here is an artist painting with a full palette. For example, the unbridled and unobscured delivery I loved so much at the beginning of “Photo Booth” would not make any sense on the trepidation-focused “New Thing,” where the more laid-back approach perfectly fits lines like “It’s a little bit of a new thing / It’s a little hard to predict / And I can’t quite describe it / It’s like a magnet flipped.” “Photo Booth” is a song about going for it romantically, and the vocal goes for it. 

All of these little things get to the heart of what I love so much about New Thing; it’s a record where we get to see an artist fully executing their vision. Zoom in on any song, separate all of the parts, and it’s clear what purpose each serves. This clarity of purpose is bolstered by great musicianship, and every choice made is the right one. It’s rare that a debut presents us with an artist operating at this level and making something so fully realized. When we get a record like this one, it’s worth cherishing, and I’m ecstatic that New Thing is now out there for everyone to experience. 


Josh Ejnes is a writer and musician living in Chicago. He has a blog about cassette tapes called Tape Study that you can find here, and he also makes music under the name Cutaway Car.

Bedridden – Moths Strapped To Each Other’s Backs | Album Review

Julia’s War Recordings

Lately, I’ve been thinking about the high-voltage film franchise Crank, starring my favorite action star from across the pond, Jason Statham. You all know these films, right? If not, the story revolves around Statham playing a hitman named Chev Chelios whose final job goes awry, only to wake up the next day poisoned by some sleazy-looking henchman. The kicker is Chelios only has an hour to live unless he keeps an ample supply of adrenaline flowing through his body as he searches for the antidote. Each antic to keep his blood pumping gets crazier than the next. Does he pick fights with the police? Of course. Doing hard drugs? Ok, we’re getting there. How about taking jumper cables to the testicles? Yep, that’ll do it.

So I was thinking, what if Statham didn’t have to do these death-defying stunts to stay alive? What if there was just something like an album that assisted our hero’s adrenaline in a safer, more controlled way? There was a thought: how about some fire-invoking music that Chelios could continuously play in his earbuds to keep his heart rate up? Enter Moths Strapped To Each Other’s Backs, the debut LP from the Brooklyn-based shoegaze band Bedridden. After an impressive showing with their 2023 EP, the group hones in on sludgy guitars turned up to max power and dizzyingly catchy choruses, proving an instant recipe for a great album.

Frontman and guitarist Jack Riley leads the charge with heavy-handed, fuzzed-out guitars and songs that fly around like a blur. Riley has a strong support system in the form of Wesley Wolffe (guitars), Sebastian Duzian (bass), and Nick Pedroza (drums), who collectively steer Bedridden’s signature thumping sound toward something gargantuan. The band comes at you in tidal waves of hard-hitting power riffs that are one part lo-fi, one part grungy, and will instantly blow you away. It’s easy to imagine that Riley and Co. might have had a poster or two of Kurt Cobain on their bedroom walls growing up. The band’s frenetic energy is reminiscent of that same vitality I hear whenever I listen to Nirvana’s debut, Bleach.

Riley writes brutally observational lyrics about the nuances of life and the uncanny interactions that can come from the most unexpected places. Some of the exchanges from afar read like Larry David-esque plot points like in the thunderously-seething “Chainsaw,” which is about Riley getting hot under the collar at their new roommate’s fixation with wanting to buy a lamp. I hope it was at least a lava lamp. The trashed-up opener “Gummy” finds Riley both drunk and high on an MDMA gummy, rejecting the continuous advances of a co-worker. Both songs are examples of the absurd situations life sometimes puts us in. Riley turns these experiences on their head by confronting them directly in these songs.

There’s also a jagged rawness that lives within the lead single, “Etch,” a gloomy-grungy rager that opens up like a mid-90s Hum song and finds Riley unspooling lyrics about pulverizing someone snooping into his life. “Philadelphia, Get Me Through” depicts a night of drunken debauchery in the City of Brotherly Love while dealing with the pain of a dead-end relationship. The song climaxes with monstrous, gorilla-pounding guitars that surely will blow your speakers out. Riley isn’t afraid to let out his anger in these songs, taking the pain from his everyday life and thrusting it on the bevy of guitars at his disposal.

Heaven’s Leg” is a hot tub time machine of a song taking us back to the glory days of early 90s alternative rock. Here, we have mountainous walls of layered guitars paired with angsty, in-your-face lyrics about an interaction gone wrong with a pastor who lost his leg. The song is a hit in every sense of the word and should be a mainstay on KROQ radio if there were any justice in the world. I’m reminded of Siamese Dream-era Smashing Pumpkins when I drop the needle on “Heaven’s Leg,” and that’s one of the highest compliments I can ever give. 

Bedridden are an incredibly energetic shoegaze band that brings the heat of their fuzzy power chords with the hopes of blowing everything and everyone off the map. The band’s knife-edged sound has a future to be an exciting new voice within the subgenre that should entice everyone to keep up with their next moves. Moths Strapped To Each Other’s Backs is a buzzy debut that isn’t front-loaded nor back-loaded but fully loaded with nonstop shoegaze bangers that keep the party going from sunset to sunrise.


David is a content mercenary based in Chicago. He's also a freelance writer specializing in music, movies, and culture. His hidden talents are his mid-range jump shot and the ability to always be able to tell when someone is uncomfortable at a party. You can find him scrolling away on Instagram @davidmwill89, Twitter @Cobretti24, or Medium @davidmwms.

Ribbon Skirt – Bite Down | Album Review

Mint Records Inc.

In 1980, Vince Clark and Andy Fletcher formed a band called Composition of Sound. Their music wasn’t really gaining traction, and they became a bit embarrassed about their name. It was stuffy, slightly dull, and didn’t fully connote their sound. They attended a synthpop concert, a burgeoning genre in the UK in the years after cheap synthesizers hit the market, and were inspired to make a sharp change in style. With that shift, they decided it would be a good time to ditch the name, and they landed on borrowing the title of a French fashion magazine – Depeche Mode. We’ll never know if Composition of Sound’s change in style would have taken off without the name change, but shortly after becoming Depeche Mode, their ascent to stardom began to take shape. 

Though their previous moniker, Love Language, was nowhere near “Composition of Sound” levels of generic-sounding pretension, Montreal rock band Ribbon Skirt, led by vocalist/guitarist Tashiina Buswa and guitarist Billy Riley, are following a similar path with a new name and a darker, more dynamic sound. “We needed a little bit of a refresh,” the band describes one of their last shows as Love Language in the Summer of 2024. “Billy came up with [Ribbon Skirt], which is kinda funny.” Tashiina’s Anishinaabe heritage inspired the new name - one that conjures her native identity and the tapestry of influences that inform the band’s new direction on their debut album, Bite Down. Ribbon skirts, worn by women of several native American tribes, could be seen as a means of continuity between the ceremonial and the everyday. Similarly, the band uses this new project to bridge their native identity with a contemporary rock aesthetic.

Photo by Ani Harroch

The band is working overtime as they usher in the Ribbon Skirt era. I had a special opportunity to speak with Tashiina and Billy at the tail end of this year’s SXSW, where they played nine shows in four days. “It’s crazy how insane it can make you feel,” Tashiina says as she describes the feeling of playing a show for a crowd of two people on the same weekend that they played in front of hundreds. After spending a couple of months with Bite Down and admiring the work that the band is putting in, I feel confident that they’ve played their last show in front of a single-digit crowd. With a fresh name, some new collaborators, and several years of experience under their belts, Ribbon Skirt have put together a collection of tracks that will be very difficult to ignore. 

The album’s opening track, “Deadhorse,” sets a moody tone with a 45-second introduction of drums and effect-laden guitar, unfolding and laying the song's foundation before the vocals come in. Lyrically, “Deadhorse” establishes a few of the album’s core themes: occupying space, feeling invisible, and getting stuck in unwanted cycles. Mentions of “standing beneath the cross” and “rolling away the stone” evoke biblical imagery that highlights Tashiina’s presence as an Anishinaabe woman in our current context, both in her compulsion to call upon a higher power and call out the deficiencies of modern Western culture. “Cellophane,” Bite Down’s lead single, follows with a similarly moody, post-punk ambiance and an extra sticky hook. Her clever combo of desperate plea and biting critique continues with an evocative cry of “save me, white Jesus,” comically calling out the same imperialistic veneer intended to obscure native identity.

When I spoke with the band about their organic songwriting partnership and process, they outlined an intuitive workflow. Most of the time, they get into their jam space until Billy lands on a guitar part he likes, and then Tashiina writes a vocal melody. “We hit the nail on the head over and over again until something happens… the songs are pretty barebones, and then we build them out in the studio. It’s a pretty long process,” they say with a smile that acknowledges the challenges but also communicates pride in what they’ve created. Ribbon Skirt’s process doesn’t sound easy, but the results are diverse, polished, and highly dynamic.

After a strong start, the following two tracks, “Off Rez” and “Wrong Planet,” make up my favorite one-two punch on the entire record. “[“Off Rez”] had so many different lives,” says Tashi. “It still didn’t really end up where we wanted it to… I think at some point, you just have to let go of it.” Hearing that about one of my favorite songs on the record was hard to fathom. “Off Rez” represents a more defiant shift in tone and features some of my favorite lines on the record as Tashiina playfully mocks who other people think she should be. The line “they want 2000s Buffy Marie” references the famed singer-songwriter who was recently stripped of several cultural recognitions after a 2023 report revealed that she had fabricated the Indigenous ancestry on which much of her musical identity relied. 

When I asked them directly about reconciling native heritage with Western musical culture, Tashiina said, “We’re a rock band…I think it’s important to take up space in places that you wouldn’t normally find indigenous people.” Ribbon Skirt don’t seem interested in engaging with tokenization; they’re letting the music speak for itself. “Wrong Planet” is in contention for my track of the year, as Tashiina’s performance here takes the best parts of 2010s post-punk sprechgesang and Courtney Love’s low register screaming. The vocalization about two-thirds into the song that leads into an explosion of pure catharsis is the most memorable moment on the record - one that I cannot wait to experience live when they (hopefully) come to Atlanta on the tour they alluded to this Fall.

Side B of the record is just as strong as the first, with a handful of daring sonic experiments that find the band exploring the farther reaches of their sound. “Cut” is a second-half gem with a fresh instrumental palette - acoustic guitar, subtle strings, and a buoyant piano section. “Look What You Did” comes close to spunky indie pop à la Wet Leg or English Teacher. “41” has a healthy dose of autotune, and “Earth Eater” wraps things up with a seismic closer that the band wisely chose as the final single leading up to Bite Down’s release. It’s all wrapped up in a tight 36-minute package that keeps things fresh and exciting the entire time without giving anyone genre whiplash - it all makes sense within the new identity that the band is cultivating.

Over the course of these nine tracks, Ribbon Skirt set out a few different possible paths forward in the post-Love-Language era  – all of which excite me for the future of the band. In an indie landscape that feels oversaturated with nervy post-punk and playlist-friendly shoegaze, Ribbon Skirt have made something that feels relevant without being overdone. Whether it was the renewed energy brought by the name change or simply the culmination of years of hard work and experience, Tashiina and Billy have crafted their best project yet, and I fully expect to see Bite Down covered as one of the most exciting debut albums of 2025.


Parker White is a tech salesperson moonlighting as a music writer. When not attending local shows in Atlanta or digging for new tunes, he’s hosting movie nights, hiking/running, or hanging out with his beloved cat, Reba McEntire. You can find him on Twitter and Instagram @parkerdoubleyoo, and you can read other stuff he’s written over on his Substack.

Glare – Sunset Funeral | Album Review

Deathwish Inc.

Music nerds love to talk about tone. As a failed musician myself, I’m obsessed with a great tone despite never being able to achieve one in any of the bands I’ve been a part of over the last fifteen years. I could write a novel’s worth about records with great tones, like the futuristic post-punk frenzy of Wipers’ 1981 seminal sophomore LP Youth Of America, the thick smoked-out sound of Acid King’s 1999 stoner rock masterpiece Busse Woods, or the crystal-clear shimmering production of Porcupine Tree’s 2005 contemporary prog cornerstone Deadwing. It’s one thing to have an album full of great songs, but when the songs actually sound great and everything is dialed in just the way it should be, the listening experience is that much better. That is the case with Sunset Funeral, the tonally impressive debut album from Texas alternative rock group Glare.

The old adage of bands having their entire lives to make their first album is Glare’s call to arms: for eight years, they’ve been slowly churning out singles and EPs, starting with 2017’s Into You and 2018’s Void In Blue, both successful initial projects that have garnered millions of streams since their release last decade. In 2021, Glare returned with Heavenly, their most substantial offering thus far but still not completely reflective of the band they’ve become. Their eleven-song output that precedes this new album is but a blueprint, a test run, a work in progress, the calm before the Sunset. These new eleven songs that make up the band’s debut LP are explosive from top to bottom and result in some of the biggest-sounding independent rock music I’ve heard in the last year and a half. This is a windows-down with the car radio cranked type of album, a get-a-call-from-your-landlord-to-stop-making-so-much-noise-during-“quiet-hours” type of album, a blissed-out blast of ‘90s alternative reignited for the modern era.

Let’s get one thing out of the way: the band name Glare, the album name Sunset Funeral, the dreamy pastel photo album cover that goes with it, and the track names therein like “Chlorinehouse” and “Different Hue” all make it very obvious what this band is all about: thickly layered guitars, vocals so washed in reverb you could shower in them, and a general reliance on big, atmospheric rock that lets them sit comfortably with contemporaries like Downward and Prize Horse. The band and album scream modern shoegaze (or, blech, “nugaze”), but they scream it with such confidence: a big pedal energy attitude of ‘This is who we are, this is what we do, and we’re going to do it as well, if not better than anyone in the monsoon of bands filled with former emos who discovered the classic run of Dinosaur Jr. albums.’ Additionally, Glare further sets themselves apart from everyone else with their tone expertly dialed in on each element. It’s one thing to get the guitars just right in a shoegaze band: that’s the part most people focus on, but Glare has clearly spent the time to make sure every member’s instrument is showcased in a noticeable way. Perhaps the strongest of them is the drums, which have one of the clearest and most thunderous sounds on a modern record of this style that I’ve ever heard.

If you heard any of the Sunset Funeral advance cuts — the sweet and groovy “Guts,” the full-force rocker “Nü Burn,” or the overarchingly thematic tone-setting album opener “Mourning Haze” — you already got a taste of Glare’s perfection of their genre. It’s not always common for a band to deliver an entire project that lives up to, and in some cases exceeds, the power of its singles, but that’s only part of what makes this album feel so special. As soon as I turned on “Mourning Haze” for the first time, I couldn’t believe how great it sounded for a first song, with its room-filling volume and a power that I’ve rarely heard matched this decade. There are only about twenty seconds of relenting when “Kiss The Sun” comes in next, until it bursts into another bright headbanger, riding the line of melody and heaviness reminiscent of influential bands like Torche and Hum.

Sunset Funeral is an album that feels so good to be lost in; its pacing is such a perfect rhythm that it’s easy not to notice that you’re halfway through the tracklist by the time “Nü Burn” begins. Glare seamlessly weave their way through every moment of this record, even down to the instrumental interlude “Felt,” which builds up to “Nü Burn” just as breezily as it winds down from “Chlorinehouse.” The soft closer “Different Hue” glides along so smoothly that it sounds completely natural leading back into “Mourning Haze” if you start the record over again. I love finding great three-track runs on albums, like “Begin The Begin” -> “These Days” -> “Fall On Me” on R.E.M.’s 1986 alternative classic Lifes Rich Pageant, or the semi-suite of “Closer You Are” -> “Auditorium” -> “Motor Away” on Guided By Voices’ 1995 landmark lo-fi odyssey Alien Lanes. You could throw a dart anywhere on Sunset Funeral and get a great three-track run, which I suppose makes the entire album a great eleven-track run, a rare feat in 2020s emo-adjacent music.

In a style that can often be monotonous or too heavy-handed in its ‘90s worship, Glare stands atop the slew of guitar rock bands with finesse, grace, and panache (pardon my French). Whether it’s on more relaxed tracks like “Saudade” and the almost-eponymous “Sungrave,” or on any of the bombastic singles, the band breathes new life into shoegaze with every second of Sunset Funeral’s runtime. It’s one of the tightest debut albums I’ve heard from a new band this decade, and possibly even on a longer timeline than that. I have no doubt that by 2030, Sunset Funeral will be talked about the way we talk about Nothing’s Guilty Of Everything, Title Fight’s Hyperview, and Turnover’s Peripheral Vision, and for my money, I’d put it above those last two for sure. Get sucked in by the sunset, Glare is here.


Logan Archer Mounts once almost got kicked out of Warped Tour for doing the Disturbed scream during a band’s acoustic set. He currently lives in Rolling Meadows, IL, but tells everyone he lives in Palatine.