Eliana Glass – E | Album Review

Shelter Press

A sea of mahogany scrolls meets my widening eyes as richly shimmering instruments catch the hot sun that pours through the windows like water. 

It was the summer before my senior year of high school, and I was at a music camp smack dab in the middle of the sweltering southern California desert. Shy, awkward, and frumpy, I was among more peers than I had ever been before. As you can imagine, I felt like a fish out of water. I was there to attend the piano program, but campers were also given the chance to explore other instruments during the camp. I eagerly signed up for the strings class, having never had the opportunity to try any instruments besides the piano. 

The moment I entered the strings classroom is one I will remember forever. Everything changed for me that day as I pulled one of the massive upright basses into my arms, timidly plucking at the thick, ropey strings and startling as the vibration rattled through my ribcage. I was in love. 

Fast forward a year to 2012: it was my freshman year of college, and I had the opportunity to take four semesters of a group strings class as part of my piano major. Obviously, the piano, being my primary point of study, was my whole world, however, I was still deeply excited to reunite with the instrument that had intrigued me for the past year. I threw myself into every class period with vigor and enthusiasm. I even continued with private lessons during my senior year, playing whatever bass I could find lying around the music building in the few moments of free time I had during the week. Learning to play the upright bass developed in me a love and appreciation for genres and pieces of music that I believe I would have found far less accessible prior. I developed an ear for jazz, ever in awe of those bassists whose fingers could flit over the unforgiving strings like sparrows. I loved the mumbling runs and satisfying slap of pizzicato. I found joy in the husky whisper of the heavy bow as my little fingers scuttled across the fingerboard. Combined with my love for and dedication to the piano, I had huge new worlds and perspectives offered to me through the bass.

It is with this love for the upright bass and the piano that I approached Eliana Glass’s debut album, E. This modern jazz masterpiece is a stunning example of the delicate balance that can be struck between diametrically opposed instruments. Each track is unhurried, savoring the meandering harmonies and giving them permission to meld into a colorful blur of sound. Glass’s rich and elegant vocals have a resonant and woody quality, floating above the gentle rhythm of each song’s slightly varied instrumentation. 

I have listened through this album countless times, and it still presents me with something new each time - a new shadow, a new sunbeam, a new feeling. While I am comfortable with the ebb and flow of jazz harmony, having done more than my fair share of listening over the years, Eliana Glass has mastered her own unique brand of harmonic progression. It is at once listenable and fresh, full of subtle surprises and satisfying progressions that keep me coming back to listen once again. 

Glass’s musical career is impressive, and well explains her prowess as a musician and composer. From first learning the piano by ear as a child to studying jazz voice at The New School, followed by years of performance and songwriting experience, Eliana’s abilities have continued to evolve with time. Her composing draws on her thorough knowledge of jazz standards and love for Brazilian music, improvisation, and vintage equipment. While most of her writing features piano, upright bass, and drums, some pieces are stripped down to just Glass and a piano, and others feature warm and weird synths. 

My favorite track on E is “Flood.” It feels almost improvisatory in nature, something that would have been written alone one evening, hummed and tenderly pieced together by candlelight. The chord progression is heart-wrenching: simple arpeggios modulate between the major, its relative minor, and the secondary dominant, leading the ear on a sonically unstable journey that is nonetheless wonderfully satisfying. The tragic lyrics are intoned in Glass’s husky low register at first, sitting beautifully in her chest voice. As the song progresses, she switches to her head voice, and I am reminded of a theremin or bowed saw: Eliana sounds otherworldly and ethereal, hovering above the piano like a phantom. Another highlight is the opening track, “All My Life,” which feels deliciously like a song from a bygone era. The rich seventh chords, beautiful jazz progressions, and thrumming bass pizzicato create a romantic and brooding setting for Glass’s stunning vocals. “I’ve waited for you all my life - all my life, I’ve waited for you,” she croons. “Give me back my life, those stars are mine, this life is mine / Stars in the sky, this life is mine.” Somehow, “All My Life” does sound like stars: evoking a deep velvet evening sky, held against the heavens by glittering stars. 

A particularly standout work on this album is “Human Dust,” which is based on a poem by Agnes Denes. I have actually had the opportunity to see this work in person, as it was acquired by the San Francisco MoMA as part of their permanent collection in 2013 on a rotating display schedule. The piece consists of the poem, which hangs on the wall, and a small glass container of “calcareous human remains.” (So yes, bits and pieces of bones.) The poem tells the story of the life of a decidedly average man, chronicling how long he lived, how many people loved him, how many pounds of bread he ate, and so on. It is an eerie, deeply thoughtful work, and Glass pays Denes’ art piece the homage it deserves with her rendition. One can see the parallels between these two visionary artists: both Denes and Glass are pushing the boundaries of their respective crafts. While one works in physical media and the latter in sonic forms, both are confronting what it means to be a contemporary artist. There is no better person to tackle the challenge that Denes’ poem presents than Eliana Glass.

The modern listener would be remiss to pass over the masterpiece that is E. Full of stunning and fresh original pieces alongside well-crafted covers, Eliana Glass’s abilities are on full display. Each piece spins in orbit around the artist like a glowing moon, reflecting the cohesive beauty that this artist is so skilled in creating. And I, for one, will watch the moons, stars, and planets of E’s delicate solar system whirl above me over and over again.


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.

Colin Miller – Losin' | Album Review

Mtn Laurel Recording Co.

The first time I ever saw Colin Miller, he was sitting on a riding mower, kind of like a lawn chair and kind of like a throne. This wasn’t the first time I had heard his name, though. No, the first time I ever heard Colin Miller’s name was when he was introduced during the live rendition of “You Are Every Girl To Me” on MJ Lenderman’s album And the Wind (Live and Loose!). Toward the end of the Jackass-indebted love song, the group launches into an instrumental jam that allows Jake Lenderman to do a roll call of his band, the titular Wind. Lenderman’s voice kind of lulls as he calls out Miller, looping around the L’s and playfully drawing out the R in his drummer’s last name. It wasn’t until Zach Romeo’s documentary Rat Bastards of Haw Creek that I finally put a face to the name.

Rat Bastards of Haw Creek is a film about the rock band Wednesday, but it’s also secretly a preservative study of Haw Creek, the pastoral slice of North Carolina countryside that several members of Wednesday lived and recorded music on before they were evicted this past year. In his mini-doc, Romeo depicts this home through alternating shots of broken-down trucks, abandoned grills, worn-down sheds covered in ivy, and lush fields dotted with low white houses that blend into the landscape. With this footage and the accompanying interviews about living there, Romeo created a poignant portrait of a place that no longer exists.

We may only be halfway through the decade, but it already feels indisputable that alternative country is the sound of 2020’s indie, with the twinkle of pedal steel becoming what feels like a requirement for rock credibility these days. There are lots of intangibles in this Country takeover (which I wrote about in the second issue of Portable Model), but one tangible reason for this sound is Colin Miller, who has been at the periphery of this scene working as collaborator, creator, and contributor to some of the most buzzed-about records of the past few years. 

Tucked away in the idyllic greenery of Haw Creek, several of the biggest alt-country debuts of the past decade were produced in those low white houses with Miller’s support. Indigo De Souza’s, I Love My Mom, Wednesday’s I Was Trying to Describe You to Someone, and MJ Lenderman’s self-titled album were all recorded in the walls of Miller’s home. This isn’t including the countless other artists that Miller was producing up until his last day on the property. This also isn't counting the number of songs simply inspired by living in Haw Creek, depicting the lives of the people who populated this space.

These alt-country stars all ended up here because Miller had inadvertently built a thriving artistic community in East Asheville thanks to Gary King, the beloved owner of the Haw Creek property. King’s low rent, affable personality, and familial-like support for these artists resulted in the creation of entire songs, albums, and discographies. In the words of Miller, “Every part of the music process benefits from livin’ in a place like this.” 

Photo by Charlie Boss

But he doesn’t live there anymore. In 2022, after years as the de facto caretaker of Gary King and his land, watching NASCAR with him and mowing his lawn, King passed away, and his land was sold. In the years between his death and the official sale of the property, Miller tasked himself with maintaining Haw Creek’s magic in King’s absence, even buying Powerball tickets and scratch-offs with the hopes of winning enough to keep his home. 

This is all captured on Colin Miller's sun-faded sophomore album, Losin', both explicitly and implicitly. While some songs call directly to distinct moments, open in their mourning, the whole album is tinged with melancholia as Miller stubbornly pushes through his permanently changed life. The fuzzy melodies and ambient soundscapes of the album, combined with Miller’s unflinching misery, create a lightly haunted feeling that envelops the record, not in a literal ghostly sense, but rather in the way that life is constantly permeated by the presence of others, and once they are gone, the unrelenting memories remain. Through Miller’s signature North Carolina twang, Losin' is an album that is dogged in its sadness and stubborn in its acceptance of change.

Birdhouse” kicks the record off with a woozy bent guitar lick and Miller laying out the pragmatic lyric, "If I stay here, I will die in silence here." Not exactly the typical place for an album about grief to start, but this is clearly the rumination of someone who has been dealing with grief and its effects for an extended period and is ready for tough change. This is the driving kinetic energy of the album: the want and need to live with loss, not disappear in it. Musically, there’s a porch-like quality to this song, as if its bright, bittersweet chords were first strummed while facing the sun despite the heartbroken words sung against it. Miller’s grief is lived-in and constant, palpable even on the best summer days.

There’s a hypnotic nature to Miller’s sound, and “4 Wheeler,” which starts with a line about robotripping, feels like hazy dreams appearing and disappearing in a thick country fog. Miller suddenly turns the blame on himself, repeating the refrain, “I can’t get to you.” In the final tragic moments of the track, an out-of-tune woodwind winds its way through Miller’s ambient sound and desperate repetition. The album is full of moments like this: a stray guitar pluck, a small riff on the keys, a faraway horn, soaring and sinking pedal steel. Behind these instruments are Miller’s friends, Jake Lenderman, who took over Miller’s usual space behind the drum kit, Xandy Chelmis, alt-country’s most prolific pedal steel player, and Ethan Baechtold, who holds it all together with his bass and keys. After all, his friends were inspired by Haw Creek and mourn Gary King, too.

Miller’s lyrics are sparsely placed throughout his songs, and the words themselves are minimal, focused on capturing a specific feeling rather than recalling an autobiographical scene. In “Porchlight,” Miller makes sense of the collapse of a relationship. Lyrics like the lamenting “I found a stranger’s boots in the living room” and the helplessly romantic “Darlin, you know you’re still my number one tube top angel” evoke a heartbroken strand of loneliness. While the lyrics are minimal, the sound is not – Miller traded his distortion at the door for a looser instrumentation. You can almost hear the cicadas chirping in the back of the track.

Cars, both driving them and watching them rust, are a constant reference for Miller throughout Losin', with most songs referencing different vehicles’ comfort, decay, or association with loved ones. The lead single, “Cadillac,” is the most straightforward in its metaphor, named after King’s favorite kind of car. This song was reviewed for Swim Into The Sound earlier in this album cycle, and in his review, Taylor Grimes notes the honest depiction Miller recalls of King, naming oxygen tanks, lazy eyes, and fake teeth. This is an incredibly vivid description woven over pedal steel.

Despite the clear grief and loss on display, the song floats by as an easy listen, light and breezy, the perfect soundtrack as the Carolinas warm up for the spring. By the end of the track, Miller lays out the stakes in the most plainspoken of terms: “It’s a good day at the wreck yard / It’s a bad day for my heart.”

If the other songs were Miller imagining cars that can’t move fast enough, “Hasbeen” is Miller with his pedal to the metal. Clocking in at under two minutes, this is the fastest song on Losin', and it zips past the sun-bleached tracklist, exhaust left in its wake. The track gains momentum as it powers on, charged by Lenderman’s kick drum. I imagine the greenery of the North Carolina hills sweeping past a car window. Lyrically, Miller likens himself to a rusting car or an aging athlete, with the capacity to rebuild with help from others; it’s wavering but hopeful. However, like a deer had leapt into the road, the whole song comes to a screeching halt as Miller repeats and pleads, “Was that you?” 

These songs feel threadbare, acting as bearers of Miller’s lamentation first, songs second. With needle-thin pedal steel warble wrapping around his words in “I Need a Friend,” Miller suggests, “Maybe I just needed / To be the one / Who leaves first.” His sad assuredness in “Birdhouse” returns in “Little Devil” as he promises, “I ain’t gonna waste your time, you ain’t gonna waste mine.” Sonically, the back half of the album moves away from the more country-flavored sound of the opening tracks and into a twang-tinged distortion. 

Lost Again” begins with a shuffling drum machine loop, building with keys and strings and the pedal steel’s whine before Miller’s distorted voice, almost buried by the instruments, sings, “I don’t need another Christmas morning / I don’t need another birthday picture cake / I just need you here for a second.” It’s in this buzzy orchestration that Miller lets his heart beat out of his chest, his honesty humming alongside the bassline as he tries to bargain for one more glimpse at a friend. While other songs on Losin' depict Miller trying to stitch his grief into his life, “Lost Again” has a distinct air of distress, like an unexpected reminder of who you lost interrupting your day. Miller is raw in his anguish as he begs, “So excuse me for lookin’ like I lost my best friend.” The car imagery returns in crushing lines like, “Just tearin’ up in your muscle car / No one’s watching for my headlights now,” which makes his loneliness palpable. A couple lines later, Miller lays out, “And no Ford Mustang will drag you back to me / Who, yeah, who will dance at my next wedding?” simultaneously accepting loss while dreading imagining a life of joyful moments without a loved one.

The album ends with “Thunder Road,” a song that feels like the pressure that builds under your eyes when you’re on the verge of tears. But the emotion driving those tears changes. The opening lyric, “Singin’ Thunder Road karaoke to a disco ball that won’t spin,” devastated me, yet I crack a smile whenever I hear the start of the next verse: “In a cul-de-sac, with a potato gun / Decapitating dead end signs.” It’s a goofy reminder to let the good wash over you, not just the sadness. Like much of this album, this song roots itself in the present, weary of nostalgia and focusing purely on scenes of memories. “Thunder Road” is lyrically reminiscent of a scrapbook, tasking the music to match Miller’s sun-soaked hope. In the final moments, Lenderman's rhythm fades away, leaving Chelmis’ pedal steel and Baechtold’s keys to sing with Miller’s words and acoustic strumming. The album ends on that same bright bitterness it started on, but it’s different now: better, lighter, and freer with everything out in the open.

Haw Creek, as immortalized in these songs, doesn’t exist anymore, both in the artistic and literal sense. While the land was sold in the years prior, in September 2024, Hurricane Helene’s unprecedented storm surge flooded the mountainous region of North Carolina the neighborhood stood in and quite literally washed the entrance away. Back in his 2023 interview in Rat Bastards of Haw Creek, Miller said, “I think it’s our favorite place in the world,” but in a recent interview, after the landscape was left emotionally and physically unrecognizable, Miller said, “It feels haunted.” While its influence will live on, Losin' is effectively a bookend to the original Haw Creek sound. 

In Losin', Colin Miller memorialized a time and place that may not exist anymore but continues to live on in his words and twang. Losin' is not about getting over your grief; it’s about the opposite — living with it, seeing it in the sunrise and the sunset, weaving it into quilts, and smelling it in gasoline. Grief is in everything, like coffee, dentures, Pall Malls, muscle cars, and familiar tree lines, and since it’s so ubiquitous, that means loss happens over and over, again and again, every time a memory strikes. Accepting the circadian rhythm of grief is difficult but necessary. Things will never be the same; how could they? But that’s okay. 


Caro Alt (she/her) is from New Orleans, Louisiana, and if she could be anyone in The Simpsons, she would be Milhouse.

Cloakroom – Last Leg of The Human Table | Album Review

Closed Casket Activities

It’s been three years and some change since the last Cloakroom album, Dissolution Wave, made its deep impact on the scene with the fascinating narrative of an asteroid miner’s life set to the backdrop of expansive fuzzed-out riffs, accompanied by desolate, crushing, and occasionally fissionful drumming. The dusty space epic’s successor, Last Leg of The Human Table, brings us back down to Earth with warm, grounding sonics and the tight, cloying squeeze of noise, all topped with lyrics that left me wondering: Is our number truly up?

‘Rollicking’ feels like a cheeky adjective for an album about just how bad everything feels. Yet when we work our way from “The Pilot” to “Ester Wind,” it's the word that lights a cigarette and asks if you’d like one. There’s a surprising amount of cordiality on Last Leg, an utter affability that is pretty comforting and can even make you forget how genuinely upsetting some of the lyricism can be. 

I’m listening to the album and scrolling, a fittingly wasteful activity, I know, but as I'm gorging on stimuli, the album's mystique unwraps a level. “The Lights Are On” thrums and undulates as I thumbwalk through videos of mass deportation news, an article about cops in North Carolina getting caught on film escorting neo-nazis to rallies, and another screenshot text wall gofundme post to bail out a friend of a friend or to help out a family in Gaza. The careful coat of feedback mirrors the numbness I feel as the entire world seems to be screaming out at me from my screen. 

Does it make you weak?
Does it take its toll?
The lights are on, but no one's home
Does it wear you thin?
Does it grind you down?
The lights are on, I don't know how

These words echo in my ears as the phone’s dull glow is swallowed by my darkening eyes. The track wafts in and out of soft, melodic chords before rearing up and stomping back down into thick and heavy guitar work that even J. Mascis would crease a grin at. 

Many a fellow reviewer has noted that there’s not much in the way of thorough questioning and answering on this record. They’re correct. Last Leg of the Human Table asks broad questions and rocks on its heels when you ask for an answer. However, this sort of gruff muddlement feels as natural a design as the tasteful harmonies and hooks found on the LP’s run. 

Last Leg of the Human Table has all the swing and sway of a rocking chair on a front porch with an all-too-clear view of the end of the world as we know it. The hum and buzz, softly padding careful fretwork, and rubber band wrist drumming all feel not too dissimilar from how a black hole breaks you down into whatever yet-to-be-named sub-sub measurement of the infinitesimally small we'll come up with, unknotting you like the slow, steady hands of an ever ancient elder being unspooling the yarn of some failed project. 

All the same, the delicate work is done with care and compassion, and this is what bleeds most through the album's attempted questioning of our state of affairs. No single answer can feel satisfying for all of this, but asking the questions is an ongoing need. It's how we battle complacency, it's how we challenge internal comforts and surrender, and though Cloakroom aren’t writing some grand war hymn for our present times, they are, however, doing what many of us should be doing: wondering out loud.


Southern California born and raised, Elias can often be found at the local gig, be it screamo, emo, hardcore or whatever. Their time in the scene is patchwork but their dedication to it and the music that makes it has made up the last few years of their life. They love this shit with the whole of their heart and will talk your ear off about it if you let them. Screamo for fucking ever.

Love your friends. Die laughing.

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.