June 15, 2026

Kalamata: Zenosyne

Kalamata

German psychedelic stoner rock trio Kalamata contemplate the passing of time on their new concept album Zenosyne, with five seamlessly linked longform instrumental tracks. A bit of vulnerability has entered their music. On their previous records it was all about wall-to-wall heavy-handed riffs, but on this one they have allowed the light to come in and give listeners the change to make up their own stories as they are transported by the transcendent post-rock.

Zenosyne means being overwhelmed by the sense that time keeps going faster. They don't want to be stuck in the past however. The band went through line-up changes, something that captured by the more reflective passages, but as a whole they want to go forward. Grief for what is being lost forever is a pain in the ass and getting to grips with loss might take quite some time. But as the five track name spell: "there is no going back".

June 14, 2026

Tiberius: "Troubadour" on CD

Bostonian indie rock band Tiberius have sold all the cassettes of their Troubadour album, so a belated release on CD is in order: "As the title of the album clearly suggests, this is a collection of storytelling songs, soul-searching autobiographical musings with an universal appeal. Going out there and show the world one's uncertainties requites quite a bit of nerve."

Words about music (840): Alanis Morissette

Alanis Morissette
I'll be writing records until I'm dead, whether people like it or not! I can't not write; if I don't, then I get really depressed. I'll keep going, I promise!

Alanis Morissette

June 13, 2026

Phish and The 74% Rule: The Shape Phish Comes Back To

Kevin Spence listened to a lot of Phish concerts and came up with the fact that jams tend to peak around 74% mark, which is not surprising as such, but there is a big difference that makes the Vermont quartet rather special:

Phish jams peak three-quarters of the way through. So do the same songs played straight, and so do most rock songs. The structure is familiar. What's not is how they get there.

Theatre: Incarnate

photo: Cian Mac Coille

Irish quintet Theatre go for a widescreen sound on their debut EP Incarnate, which fits lyrics wherein the emotions run high. They put folk, post-punk and shoegaze in a blender and topped it off with the crystal clear lead vocals of Maeve O’Shea. Whether she tackles bittersweet childhood memories (You Are), religion (Messiah) or turns the meaning of a 16th Century joyous hymn (Gaudete) into something dark and foreboding thanks to Dara Gooney's inspired guitar licks, it is never straightforward. They are fully aware that straying from sign-posted roads is far more interesting than playing it safe.

This is a band that is not feeling around where they want to go. They have hit the ground running, fully formed, with a bunch songs that earned them a place on the rock club circuit pretty damn fast. All they need now is more material for a full-length and their label to shell out the money for a physical release.