On Tyranny: Feminist Punk Band Cheap Perfume Declares ‘White Supremacy Is Not Punk Rock’

Posted in Features, On Tyranny, On Tyranny, Videos with tags , , , , , , , , , on 09/30/2025 by Kurt Orzeck

Cheap Perfume don’t know how to talk cheap. Ahead of their new album dropping Friday, feminist punk quartet Cheap Perfume discuss Authoritarian America with rock journalist Kurt Orzeck as part of his ongoing series On Tyranny. Vocalist Stephanie Byrne and guitarist/co-vocalist Jane No open up about threats they’ve received, how the LGBTQ+ community is under attack and needs to band together now more than ever, and how they “implore artists to just say ‘fuck that’ to self-censorship.”

Preorder Cheap Perfume’s Don’t Care. Didn’t Ask, which comes out Friday on Snappy Little Numbers, here.

Check out the archive of The Bad Penny‘s ever-growing and increasingly popular On Tyranny series here.

From the Vault: Inside The Label – Prosthetic Records

Posted in Features, Inside The Label with tags , , , , , , on 09/30/2025 by Kurt Orzeck

As far as the music industry is concerned, the Apocalypse has arrived. All that remains of major labels is their smoldering, blackened skeletons; elsewhere, chaos reigns, with only the very fittest gritting out a way to survive.

But across this bloody battlefield, Prosthetic Records is one of the few labels standing tall. Some way, some how, metal is continuing to sell in this chilly climate: Mastodon and Killswitch Engage, for example, recently cracked the Billboard 200 top 10 with ease. Chalk it up to loyal fans, to kids who want to invest in more than just an invisible file – or maybe to knuckle-draggers who scratch their head at the word “torrent.”

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Titanic’s ‘Hagen’: Two Cent Album Review

Posted in Album Reviews, Reviews with tags on 09/30/2025 by Kurt Orzeck

Titanic wasn’t all that big when it made its debut in October 2023 with Vidrio meekly introduced the project birthed by pianist/guitarist i.la Católica. Something of a cross between a bedroom recording and a hushed session in an after-hours jazz speakeasy, the modest affair featured only three additional guest players, who contributed carefully measured amounts of vocals, cello, saxophone and drums to its eight songs. The follow-up LP, Hagen, does a far better job living up to the Titanic moniker with which Católica christened her project. Read my review on Spectrum Culture.

Der Weg Einer Freiheit’s ‘Innern’: Two Cent Review

Posted in Album Reviews, Reviews with tags on 09/29/2025 by Kurt Orzeck

Der Weg Einer Freiheit’s new album, Innern, will be regarded as one of the year’s greatest metal records: one that hits hard by virtue of masterful execution of musical adeptness, and that simultaneously leaves listeners feeling better about themselves than when they pressed play. In a world that is completely upside-down, perhaps black netal is our best hope of survival. Read my review on Veil of Sound.

Shiner Bassist Reveals His Favorite Bands: Tool, IDLES, King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard

Posted in Interviews with tags , , , on 09/29/2025 by Kurt Orzeck

Shiner bassist Paul Malinowski talks about producing the Kansas City post-hardcore band’s new LP, BELIEVEYOUME, as well as dream collaborators and nightmare live show experiences. Read my Shiner interview on FLOOD.

On Tyranny: Metal Band Malevich ‘Had a String of Shows Canceled for Some of Our [Pro-Palestinian] Activism’

Posted in Features, Interviews, On Tyranny, On Tyranny, Videos with tags , , , , , , on 09/29/2025 by Kurt Orzeck

Last night, The Bad Penny had the distinct pleasure of catching up with one-half of Atlanta’s blackened post-death metal band Malevich: drummer/vocalist Sasha Schilbrack-Cole and guitarist Josh McIntyre. We talked a bit about Under a Gilded Sun, their new album, which hit the streets and the Interwebs late last month. But the bulk of our conversation revolved around how Authoritarian America is impacting musicians, as we had planned for the interview to be part of The Bad Penny‘s ongoing series On Tyranny.

Little did we know that we’d be speaking to two individuals whose intellectual capacity is as profound as their crushingly righteous music. Enjoy perhaps the best installment yet in The Bad Penny‘s On Tyranny series by watching the entire video above or on YouTube, or reading an abridged version of the conversation after the jump.

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On Tyranny: Weakened Friends’ Secret to Battling MAGA? Community Involvement

Posted in Features, On Tyranny, On Tyranny with tags , , , , , on 09/28/2025 by Kurt Orzeck

“As someone who is a queer individual, my safety came from a lot of people dying and protesting and fighting for my rights to feel safe. … I’m willing to have a boot on my neck for the people that I love and care about. I’m here for the fight.”
–Sonia Sturino

Only about 69,500 people live in Portland, Maine, which is one of the least-populous states in the U.S. (and is the only one in the Lower 48 to share a border with just one other state). But let’s drop the Cliff Clavin act and get to the most salient fact of interest to you, dear reader of The Bad Penny: Portland is home to one of the most red-hot indie-rock bands in the Northeast: Weakened Friends.

Led by impossible-not-to-love married multi-instrumentalists Sonia Sturino (who has a green card) and Annie Hoffman, this year marks the 10th anniversary since Weakened Friends cranked out their first release: The crunchy, power-chord song “Won Yet,” which proved from the git-go that the group had the sharpest of ears for melody, harmony and chorus. In a mere 12 days, the sumptuous songsmiths will unveil Feels Like Hell on the inimitable Don Giovanni records.

When The Bad Penny caught wind of the topics that Weakened Friends address on their third record – resisting the temptation to succumb to “deep nihilism in the face of global capitalism” and instead refuse self-censorship and embrace the freedom to speak out, we quickly invited them to participate in our ongoing On Tyranny series – and both Sturino and Hoffman merrily obliged. 

We staged a video chat with them about three weeks ago, as we all hunkered down in our kitchens (theirs is far more decorative than mine) to share our thoughts and feelings about the state of the U.S., and the impact Authoritarian American is having on musicians.

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Pet Sounds #68: Temple of Love Open Their Hearts to Fulci the Cat

Posted in Features, Interviews, Pet Sounds with tags , , , , , , on 09/28/2025 by Kurt Orzeck

Lest you think Austin, Texas, is only comprised of psych-rock bands these days, The Bad Penny brings you Temple of Love, a goth-rock/dark-wave band whose debut, Songs of Love and Despair, drops November 7 on Reptile House. Fans of The Black Angels and Killing Joke, take note.

Husband-and-wife duo Steve Colca and Suzy Bravo incepted Temple of Love way back in 2018, intending it to be a “pet” recording project all their own. But the two musicians – who hail from touted doom bands Destroyer of Light and Witchcryer, respectively – decided to aim for loftier ambitions after their 2019 demo earned them heaps of praise.

Consisting of guitarist/vocalist Colca, vocalist Bravo, drummer Patrick Pascucci and bassist Joseph Maniscalco, there’s also an honorary member of the band: Colca and Bravo’s beloved black cat, Fulci. We’ll have plenty more to say about Temple of Love and their maiden release in the future, but first, let’s give the hat-wearin’, snow-bearin’, self-brushin’ Fulci some affection and attention.

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Reggae-Metal Mashers Aurorawave Amped to Play First Show Since New LP Release Tonight in Boise

Posted in Interviews on 09/28/2025 by Kurt Orzeck

When The Bad Penny caught up with Aurorawave frontman Nathan Aurora on Wednesday, ahead of the metal-reggae band’s gig at The Shredder tonight, he was in the zone. The previous week, he achieved a lifelong dream by playing Louder Than Life Festival, now the biggest rock event in the States, and that was just a month after his band released their second full-length, Monument. Featuring members of Underoath and Emmure, the record is doing well on the charts and providing Aurorawave with plenty of wind in their sails as they tour behind it.

We caught up with Aurora as his L.A.-based band was cruising into Denver, and what turned into a short Q+A a about Aurorawave’s show tonight in Boise swelled into a larger conversation about the birth of the band, its personality and mission, and even what drives Aurora as a musician and human being. So here we go …

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Guerilla Toss, Pals of Pavement’s Stephen Malkmus and Phish’s Trey Anastasio, Ready to Go Ape in Boise Tonight

Posted in Interviews with tags , , , , , , , , , on 09/27/2025 by Kurt Orzeck

After a kinda middling summer concert-wise in Boise, the next month is chock-full with super shows, and The Bad Penny will do its best to both inform you about can’t-miss and encourage you to attend them. One is happening tonight at Shrine Social Club, which will host Sub Pop art-rock quintet Guerilla Toss, along with Vancouver, British Columbia’s alt-punks Still Depths and Evan Zuri.

Guerilla Toss’ set will perform selections from their fifth record, You’re Weird Now, which dropped Sept. 12 and features contributions by Stephen Malkmus of Pavement (who produced the album) and Ben Katzman, who came in third on Season 46 of Survivor. Bet you didn’t have that latter guest appearance on your bingo card.

Guerilla Toss singer Kassie Carlson did The Bad Penny the favor of touching base with us during their long drive from Portland to the City of Trees. Our conversation went a little something like this:

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