More DIY sheet metal techno rippers for dark basements and mosh pits.
"Do Not Be Afraid of Tenderness" is the first time Robin Stewart and Harry Wright have had to amend their recording process in years. Usually working across a table - a sight that should be familiar to anyone who's caught their notorious live performances in the last few years - COVID-19 restrictions meant the duo couldn't record together, so they had to improvise. These three tracks were assembled remotely, but thankfully lose none of the kinetic, grubby hardware pressure of 2019's self-titled full-length.
Opener 'Silkworm' is our pick of the bunch, an unbashedly 'uge klubnacht stomper with kicks heavy enough to put a hole through a frozen lake and vocal cuts that just about remind us of what it was like to be barely functioning on a packed dancefloor. Basically a druggy, grinding dungeon jammer.
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More DIY sheet metal techno rippers for dark basements and mosh pits.
"Do Not Be Afraid of Tenderness" is the first time Robin Stewart and Harry Wright have had to amend their recording process in years. Usually working across a table - a sight that should be familiar to anyone who's caught their notorious live performances in the last few years - COVID-19 restrictions meant the duo couldn't record together, so they had to improvise. These three tracks were assembled remotely, but thankfully lose none of the kinetic, grubby hardware pressure of 2019's self-titled full-length.
Opener 'Silkworm' is our pick of the bunch, an unbashedly 'uge klubnacht stomper with kicks heavy enough to put a hole through a frozen lake and vocal cuts that just about remind us of what it was like to be barely functioning on a packed dancefloor. Basically a druggy, grinding dungeon jammer.
More DIY sheet metal techno rippers for dark basements and mosh pits.
"Do Not Be Afraid of Tenderness" is the first time Robin Stewart and Harry Wright have had to amend their recording process in years. Usually working across a table - a sight that should be familiar to anyone who's caught their notorious live performances in the last few years - COVID-19 restrictions meant the duo couldn't record together, so they had to improvise. These three tracks were assembled remotely, but thankfully lose none of the kinetic, grubby hardware pressure of 2019's self-titled full-length.
Opener 'Silkworm' is our pick of the bunch, an unbashedly 'uge klubnacht stomper with kicks heavy enough to put a hole through a frozen lake and vocal cuts that just about remind us of what it was like to be barely functioning on a packed dancefloor. Basically a druggy, grinding dungeon jammer.
More DIY sheet metal techno rippers for dark basements and mosh pits.
"Do Not Be Afraid of Tenderness" is the first time Robin Stewart and Harry Wright have had to amend their recording process in years. Usually working across a table - a sight that should be familiar to anyone who's caught their notorious live performances in the last few years - COVID-19 restrictions meant the duo couldn't record together, so they had to improvise. These three tracks were assembled remotely, but thankfully lose none of the kinetic, grubby hardware pressure of 2019's self-titled full-length.
Opener 'Silkworm' is our pick of the bunch, an unbashedly 'uge klubnacht stomper with kicks heavy enough to put a hole through a frozen lake and vocal cuts that just about remind us of what it was like to be barely functioning on a packed dancefloor. Basically a druggy, grinding dungeon jammer.
Estimated Release Date: 05 March 2021
Please note that shipping dates for pre-orders are estimated and are subject to change
More DIY sheet metal techno rippers for dark basements and mosh pits.
"Do Not Be Afraid of Tenderness" is the first time Robin Stewart and Harry Wright have had to amend their recording process in years. Usually working across a table - a sight that should be familiar to anyone who's caught their notorious live performances in the last few years - COVID-19 restrictions meant the duo couldn't record together, so they had to improvise. These three tracks were assembled remotely, but thankfully lose none of the kinetic, grubby hardware pressure of 2019's self-titled full-length.
Opener 'Silkworm' is our pick of the bunch, an unbashedly 'uge klubnacht stomper with kicks heavy enough to put a hole through a frozen lake and vocal cuts that just about remind us of what it was like to be barely functioning on a packed dancefloor. Basically a druggy, grinding dungeon jammer.