Favorite Films: Dying Remains’ Frontman Treasures ‘The Thing,’ ‘Suspiria,’ ‘City of the Living Dead,’ ‘Wounded Fawn’

Posted in Favorite Films, Features, Interviews, Lists with tags , , , , , , , , on 11/29/2025 by Kurt Orzeck

Two months in, we’re still savoring the delicious drivel dealt by death-metal band Dying Remains via Merciless Suffering following its mid-September release. We’re also grateful to have recently connected with the Maggot Stomp band and chatted up vocalist/guitarist/bassist Damon MacDonald about its debut LP.

While we had MacDonald on the horn – or the Zoom, or the whatchamacallit – we picked his brain about movies, as we were armed with the knowledge ahead of time that he’s a fan of horror movies. Here are his choice picks:

1. The Thing (1982)

“The first movie that comes to mind is John Carpenter’s The Thing,” MacDonald said. “That was one of the first couple of horror movies I saw when I was young. I think I was 7, and my old man showed it to me, and I was like, ‘This is so cool.’ [My love of horror movies] started there.”

When asked whether he believes in the notion publicly proffered by notably untrustworthy director John Carpenter that there’s a way to determine whether the two guys at the end, MacReady (Kurt Russell) and Childs (Keith David), had become The Thing, he replied:

“There was a game that came out tied to The Thing on PS2 and Xbox in 2002 – and it’s been stated that it’s canon – and Carpenter made a jab by having MacReady alive at the end of the game. But it’s still just one of those things that are open to interpretation. You’re never going to figure it out. [There’s also the theory that] the whiskey [the characters drink at the end of the movie] was actually gasoline, but it’s like I don’t know if I buy it.”

When asked to identify his favorite scene in the film, MacDonald said: “The defibrillator scene when [a] stomach opens up and rips [the] hands off [another character is] so sick. It’s gnarlier than the [first] Alien scene with the [chest burst].”

Continue reading

Black Magic Tree’s ‘Terra’: Two Cent Review

Posted in Album Reviews, Reviews with tags on 11/29/2025 by Kurt Orzeck

“Psych” and “groove” are not mutually exclusive terms, as Berlin boys Black Magic Tree prove on their sexy second album. This beaut of a psych-based record is unforced, fun, unpretentious and, simply put, a pleasure to listen to. Read my full review on Treble.

Doppelgängers: Dave Grohl and Reggie Watts

Posted in Doppelgängers, Features with tags , on 11/29/2025 by Kurt Orzeck

Long-lost cousins, maybe?

From the Vault: Una Entrevista Española Con Joey Santiago de Los Pixies

Posted in Interviews with tags , on 11/28/2025 by Kurt Orzeck

Joey Santiago no es de Santiago, Chile – su tierra nativo es las Filipinas. Pero con canciones como “Isla de Encanta” y “Vamos,” siempre hemos ponderado cuál es la conexión entre los Pixies y la lengua español. Esperamos que tenemos tanta confianza con la idioma para compartir con ustedes una entrevista española con el guitarrista.

Aqui son las consecuencias del experimento:

Muchísimas gracias para la entrevista, señor Santiago. ¿Por qué a veces hablan en español los Pixies si tú y Charles no sabe como hablarlo?

Joey Santiago: Charles estudió en Puerto Rico para un semestre y se hagó muy fluido en español. Podría decir que su experiencia en Puerto Rico tuvo una influencia fuerte para [la banda] cantar en español. Otra razón fuerte es que simplemente que oye bien.

Continue reading

Papir’s ‘IX’: Two Cent Review

Posted in Album Reviews, Reviews with tags on 11/28/2025 by Kurt Orzeck

A 75-minute album consisting of one song divided into seven parts, of course this is a psychedelic album. Copenhagen instrumentalists Papir are fully accepting and aware of their identity, knows exactly what they are and what they have the capability to do: exert a Svengali-like control over a willing audience. Read my review of IX on Treble.

New Releases Nov. 28 (Record Release Day): Nine Inch Nails Tributes, Struck a Nerve, Feel Worse, 1349, Blut Aus Nord, (Updated at 11:52 a.m. MT)

Posted in Lists, New Releases with tags , , , , , , , , on 11/28/2025 by Kurt Orzeck

Perdition Temple’s Malign Apotheosis (Hells Headbangers)

1349 – Winter Mass (Black Metal Promotion)

Aktor – Professori (Season Two) (High Roller)

Alexisonfire – House of Strombo (Live in Toronto, ON 2019) (Dine Alone)

All We Leave Behind – In Absence of Light (Octopus Rising)

Amerakin Overdose – Feliz Navidad single

Ancient Settlers – Autumnus (Revisited) EP (Scarlet)

Autopsy – Shitfun 30th anniversary vinyl edition (Peaceville)

Blackbear – Britney in ’07 single

Blut Aus Nord – Ethereal Horizons (Debemur Morti)

Bratmobile – Real Janelle & The Peel Session vinyl reissue (Kill Rock Stars)

Melissa Carper – Very Carper Christmas (Soundly)

City and Colour – Sometimes Lullaby (Dine Alone)

Crash Richard – Sensitive Devil

Nick D’Virgilio – Rewiring Genesis: Tribute to The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway (Inside Out)

Dead and Dripping – Nefarious Scintillations (Transcending Obscurity)
• free download

Equilibrium – Equinox (Nuclear Blast) 

Excide – Bastard Hymns (SharpTone)

Continue reading

Void of Sleep’s ‘The Abyss Into Which We All Have to Stare’: Two Cent Review

Posted in Album Reviews, Reviews with tags on 11/27/2025 by Kurt Orzeck

One imagines that Italy’s Void of Sleep turns in a rider for every tour that simply requests “Smoke machines. And more smoke machines. Did we mention we need a lot of smoke machines? We refuse to perform without smoke machines.” Read my review of their new album, The Abyss Into Which We All Have to Stare, on Treble.

On Tyranny: Justin Sinkovich Focuses on ‘Discipline’ Amid ‘Stressful Times’ as Some Friends Leave US

Posted in Features, On Tyranny, On Tyranny, Videos with tags , , , , , , , , on 11/27/2025 by Kurt Orzeck

Since the onset of On Tyranny, we’ve wanted to hear what Justin Sinkovich has to say about the current state of the country and, per The Bad Penny series’ specific focus, how artists like himself are grappling with Authoritarian America.

Continue reading

10 Best Free Bandcamp Downloads #3: Dead and Dripping, FACS, Sulaco, Frontierer, Earthbøund

Posted in Album Reviews, Lists, MP3s, Reviews with tags , , , , , , , , , on 11/27/2025 by Kurt Orzeck

Strapped for cash but hungry for great music? You won’t have much luck camping out at the grocery store these days; Bandcamp is a way better destination. Here’s a rundown of 10 rad releases, about half of them newly released, that The Bad Penny recently came across on Bandcamp.

(Note: If you do have some green to spare, please show your thanks to these deserving artists and labels.)

1. Dead and Dripping’s Nefarious Scintillations (Transcending Obscurity)

The physical editions of this release by New Jersey’s brutal death metal band Dead and Dripping aren’t out till tomorrow, but the always-generous Transcending Obscurity Records granted us the digital version early – and for free. Fans of Suffocation and Wormed will eat up this latest journey into the grotesque courtesy of Evan Daniele, who is responsible for every lick of music and even the artwork that comes with Nefarious Scintillations.

Continue reading

Pet Sounds #73: Something Is Waiting’s Guitarist/Bassist Has Three Cats That Aren’t Also Aliens (We’re Pretty Sure)

Posted in Features, Interviews, Pet Sounds with tags , , on 11/27/2025 by Kurt Orzeck

rom the Jesus Lizard to Shellac to Local H to Rod Blagojevich, Chicago has produced some of the fiercest bands of the past 30 years. On fire right now is Something Is Waiting, who released a thoroughly raucous live record, Livelick, roughly a year ago via Learning Curve Records, which appears stronger than ever in its 25th year as a label.

As we’ve come to discover over the 13 months since The Bad Penny launched Pet Sounds, the most seemingly intimidating musicians tend to have the biggest hearts, especially toward cats (and dogs too, but it appears that cats have the edge). The latest example we’ve come across is Something Is Waiting guitarist/bassist William T. Fay, who has three cats: Sega (16 years old), Ripley (8) and Newt (7).

All three cats are domestic shorthairs; Sega is a calico, Ripley a quarter-trash-bag/ raccoon and Newt a tortoiseshell. We recently clawed at Fay for more info on his beloved buddies, and here’s how our conversation went.

Continue reading