In the fifth installment of Pet Sounds via New Noise, we check in with synth-pop performative artist and “Renaissance Woman” Geneva Jacuzzi.
Yellfire Bassist Loves Post-Hardcore — And Dogs Too
Posted in Interviews with tags Yellfire on 10/19/2024 by Kurt OrzeckHop over to New Noise‘s website for the latest installment in our ongoing series, Pet Sounds. This time around, we chat with Casey Nolan, bassist for Seattle-based post-hardcore crew Yellfire, about her love of dogs.
Common Wounds Bassist Talks About Bringing The Pain On New LP
Posted in Interviews with tags Common Wounds, Matt Martinez on 10/18/2024 by Kurt OrzeckCommon Wounds, a post-hardcore band from Phoenix, aren’t trying to solve all the world’s problems—just aspiring to help us cope with our brave fearful new world.
A Place to Bury Strangers Frontman Wants Every Show to Feel Like Their Last
Posted in Interviews with tags a place to bury strangers on 10/17/2024 by Kurt OrzeckWith latest album by noise-squadron A Place to Bury Strangers having come out earlier this month to a very strong reception, New Noise rolls out to some bonus material from our month and entertaining conversation with the band’s frontman.
Babe Rainbow Get Big Boost From King Gizzard Crew
Posted in Interviews with tags Babe Rainbow on 10/16/2024 by Kurt OrzeckAfter the recent announcement of Babe Rainbow’s signing to a new label, check out this previous unpublished New Noise conversation with their vocalist as she contemplated the psych-rock band’s future last year.
Blood Incantation’s ‘Absolute Elsewhere’: Two Cent Review
Posted in Album Reviews, Reviews on 10/16/2024 by Kurt OrzeckAs Blood Incantation continue to forge new paths for technica death metal, it often feels like the Denver band is doing too much on their third album. Read my full review via FLOOD.
Common Wounds Bassist Says ‘Dogs Diffuse Negativity’
Posted in Interviews with tags Common Wounds on 10/15/2024 by Kurt OrzeckVenture to New Noise for the latest installment in our series shining a spotlight on musicians’ deep affection for their pets. This time around, the bassist for post-hardcore band Common Wounds talks about how his emotional health is stronger thanks to his two pooches.
Brutal Death Metal Vocalist of Benighted Is Dogs’ Best Friend
Posted in Features, Interviews, Pet Sounds with tags Benighted, Julien Truchan on 10/14/2024 by Kurt OrzeckTo appease man’s “best friends,” a reputation they’re going to have to do a better job living up to after all the barking they directed at us, we decided to focus our second installment of Pet Sounds on canines—specifically, ones befriended by the frontman of French brutal death-metal act Benighted. Read the interview on New Noise.
The Ghost Of Robert Palmer Can Reunite Our Divided Nation
Posted in Comedy, Essays with tags Robert Palmer on 10/13/2024 by Kurt OrzeckThese days, trying to get all Americans to agree on something—anything—seems like a fool’s errand. But that sentiment doesn’t speak to an irrefutable truth; it speaks to our embarrassing and shameless lack of imagination, with social media as one of the main culprits.
For example, The Bad Penny is willing to bet that, if 1,000 people living in the U.S. were surveyed and given a multiple-choice test to name the worst lyric ever, in any music genre, from any point in the history of pop music, the end result would be more or less unanimous. The lyric is, has to be, could only be, and always will be: “Doctor, doctor give me the news/ I’ve got a bad case of lovin’ you!”
Robert Palmer, who died in September 2003, was perhaps a very nice man. He might not have had any enemies. His fan base is still intact more than two decades after Palmer’s passing. But dude had so much blood on his hands for claiming the unimaginatively titled “Bad Case of Loving You (Doctor Doctor),” as one his top hits, especially because he didn’t even write the damn thing. Let’s be real: Palmer made the conscious decision to turn that turd of a tune into a hit. And for that reason, he should have been embarrassed and ashamed of himself. Grocery shoppers who have to suffer through that god awful “hit” are the crowd who are most owed an apology—hell, maybe even reparations.
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