Rock Your World with the Hottest New Songs from Blues Pills, Bill Fisher, Demon and More!
London rockers The Karma Effect describe themselves as “Black Crowes vs Aerosmith, with a step-sibling called Greta Van Fleet,” and with credentials like that it’s no wonder they won our most recent Tracks Of The Week skirmish. So congratulations to them. And congratulations to Tyler Bryant & The Shakedown, and to Joanne Shaw Taylor, who finished on the podium but tantalisingly short of overall victory. Perhaps next time. Below you’ll find this week’s runners and riders. Let’s hope none falls at Becher’s Brook.
Bad Nerves – You Should Know By Now
Bad Nerves are best known for power-pop blasts in punk clothing, typically lasting under two minutes. With that in mind You Should Know By Now is practically prog by their standards, in that it clocks in at three and a half minutes, finds them on dreamier, moodier sonic ground with some tasty tempo shifts, and doesnât break quite such a sweat, pace-wise. Happily, these extra trappings donât come at the expense of immediacy â infectious pop melodies with a side of heartache, which they do so well. Another reason to earmark their next album, Still Nervous, which comes out on May 31.
Blues Pills – Donât You Love It
By their own admission, Blues Pills have their share of âdepressed sounding songsâ. So itâs a delight to find them audibly having an absolute blast on this old-timey, good-timey swirl of 60s hippie sunshine and riffed up rockânâroll. Think Rolling Stones meets Janis Joplin, with a disco-soul kiss. âItâs something that came with age,â says guitarist Zack âWeâve been a band for a long time and with this album, and at this point, itâs firstly about having fun making music. In the earlier days there was a lot of pressure, now weâve let all that go.â
Bill Fisher – Yell Of The Ringman
Church Of The Cosmic Skull leader by day, doom rocker by night, Bill Fisher leans into the latter gig with Yell Of The Ringman. Itâs loud, itâs gnarly, itâs super-melodic but still dripping with beardy mystique⊠âImagine Kate Bush and Michael McDonald wrote a yacht doom album,â Bill says (âyacht doomâ? Is that a thing?? Letâs say itâs a thing), âsatirising edgelord-tech-billionaire-worship, recorded by Peter Gabriel and Tori Amos in the early 80s using an industry pre-release unit of the late 90s Yamaha PSR8000 synthesiser, several heavily distorted guitars, and a baby grand.â Cue Wayneâs World-style cry of: âdoes this dude know how to party or what?!â
Gyasi – All Messed Up (Medley)
Raised in the woods of West Virginia but destined for the stage, the leopard-printed, platform-booted Gyasi channels a hot mix of blues and glam rock in this live track â taking in slices of Lou Reed and Doors hits in the process. Part of his new live album Rock n’ Roll Sword Fight (billed as his answer to The Stones’ Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out! or The Who’s Live at Leeds), its sass comes with rich, chunky guitars and the swagger of a Keith Richards-David Bowie collaboration.
Shannon & The Clams – Big Wheel
For all its garage-y psych/doo-wop bounce and Northern Soul edges â plus a stylishly screwy video thatâs a bit Metropolis with a side of Beetlejuice â the Californian retro mavericksâ new single is rooted in tragedy. Like its Dan Auerbach-produced parent album, The Moon Is In The Wrong Place (out on May 10), it was heavily informed by the sudden death of frontwoman Shannon Shawâs fiancee in 2022 â just a few weeks before their wedding. The resulting music is sharp and super catchy, but a proper listen reveals meditations on how âtime and reality become distorted in the face of sudden lossâ.
Scarlet Rebels – Secret Drug
AC/DCâs Thunderstruck meets The Cult in the main hook of the Welsh rockersâ new single. Beefy, moreish and more expansive than their previous work, it grabs the listener by the gut with driving guitars and a soaring chorus thatâs sure to go down well with festival crowds and a few beers. Admittedly the opening couplet is a bit of a clunker (âI ainât got a chemical dependency/It lets me live my life so normallyâ… come on fellas, really?!) but that aside Secret Drug is a happy marriage of classic and contemporary rock thatâs whetted our appetite for their next album, Where The Colours Meet.
Demon – Face The Master
Demon might be in the running for this year’s “Band who basically invented Ghost decades ago but Tobias Forge hasn’t admitted to it yet” award, but such comparisons don’t appear to have altered their own course much, and Face The Master is more of what they do best, which is to bake a cake of slickly produced, hard-edged AOR and layer it with demonic, somewhat ghostly frosting. New album Invincible (their 14th, not that we’re counting) is due on May 17.
Froglord – Frogman
With a plot that seems to be part Blair Witch Project and part Swamp Thing, the video for Frogland, the new single by Bristolian doom lords Froglord, was allegedly put together by struggling filmmaker Dallas Kyle, who travelled to woodland deep in Loveland, Ohio, to capture footage of the fabled frogman, a creature he’d first encountered (and filmed) as a 12-year-old. At least we think that’s what the story is â it’s hard to concentrate with such disturbing imagery being secreted directly into our eyes. The music’s good too. A bit like The Stooges’ TV Eye, but with added bufotoxins.