Featuring ex-members of Cubanate and Front 242, the pulsating rhythms of Cyber-Tec remind me of such veteran maestros as Ultravox, Visage, and Classix Nouveaux.
In the 1960s, Mal Sharpe and Jim Coyle would tape interviews with random people they met on the street. These interviews were about fantastical subjects.
This is the first CD offering from biker/Highway Poet, Colorado T. Sky, and it’s a pure gem. It’s not perfect, in fact, it’s somewhat proud of its own flaws.
The music is HEAVY. Thick, dark, and raging. A caustic liquid, dripping from my speakers like rivers of fire, howling and shrieking in anger and torment.
Bim Skala Bim offered a compelling set from their 11-year, six-album history and unveiled five new songs which blended easily into a catalog of set classics.
I don’t know why they want to be Filter, but if they keep not doing what they’re good at, perhaps they’ll succeed in being a second-rate flash-in-the-pan.
From the swamps of NOLA, with their pulsating bass and voice of eternal doom. Dax Riggs’ voice is kind of like a melodic trill over a deep and angry growl.