Blog — Page 35 of 277

The infrequently-updated site blog, featuring a range of content including show reviews, musical musings and off-color ramblings on other varied topics.

Water of Life - Cut Hill Distillery

Posted by T • June 21, 2022

Water of Life - Cut Hill Distillery 

Founded by a conglomerate of motivated beverage industry professionals, Cut Hills Distillery set out to not merely build on the foundations of the qualities that Australian whiskey has become known and appreciated for and creating their own contemporary take on classic styles, but pro-actively paving the way for the pushing the envelope further by honouring traditional methods as well as employing modern technologies.

Cut Hill Distllery’s first forays into the world of producing their own drops started with an initial release program, which was comprised of multiple, private cask bottlings in a bid to bridge the time before their first own releases.

My first exposure to Cut Hill was via its Private Barrel Series Wine Cask, which as the name would suggest, takes advantage of the barrels sourced from South Australia’s widely recognized Barossa and McLaren Vale wine regions, which previously held a range of characteristic red wine varietals.

On approach, the nostrils are tickled by hints of cherry, winey and sweet aromas, backed by blueberry, grassy and apple nuances backed by the faintest hints of spicy, clove eugenol nuances.

On the top of the mouth, we enter sweet, buttery flavours informed by vanilla, honey and rum, which are further accentuated by delicately calibrated sour and slightly tannic highlights.
The medium length finish culminates in oaky highlights and reverberates with welcome, warming hints of char. 

Summa summarum, clocking in at a relatively tame ABV of 43%, this little number is a great starting point for wine lovers looking to broaden their horizon and embark into whiskey territory.

Taking things up a notch or two is Cut Hill Distillery’s Fortified Cask expression, which lives up to its name from the get go as what materializes on the nose, catapults us into woody, piny territory, accompanied by equally sweet and tarty notes rounded out with a characteristic almond nuance.

What the nose promised is seamlessly transitioned onto the palate, where a rich avalanche of fruit-forward flavours reminiscent of Amaretto-like honeyed vanilla and biscuity, dulce de leche sapors.

The elongated finish concludes with brown sugary coca notes backed by the warm spicy and slightly astringency of nutmeg and cloves, resulting in quite an indulgent affair that makes this expression a borderline ideal dessert dram.

Given the quality of the aforementioned first two expressions and their wine barrel based approach, I cannot wait to experience Cut Hill Distillery trying its hand at channelling its alchemy in mead cask and cask strength expressions.

On the gin side of things, Cut Hill created their own idiosyncratic take on the traditional dry style with their Lost Phoenix Australian Dry Gin.

Based on a foundation of grain spirit and infused with botanicals grown on their own turf, i.e. a melange of pepperberry, lemon myrtle and peppercorns, the focus is firmly set on paying homage to South Australia and all that is has to offer.

Centred around a juniper forward approach, slightly piney flavours with a touch of pepperiness and fruitiness are flanked by citrussy and vegetal-peppery highlights, which reach into grapefruity realms, to then be further accentuated by aromatic menthol notes.

Cut Hill’s Lost Phoenix gin proves to be a great base for a G&T and even holds its own as a straight sipper.

---

image from company website

T • June 21, 2022

Audio = Ground Zero – JBL Home Audio options

Posted by T • June 20, 2022

Audio = Ground Zero – JBL Home Audio options

Given the devil’s pace TV technology has advanced over recent years, with models getting smaller yet quantum leaps being made in terms of picture quality, you are going to want some serious audio to go along with technological improvements, which, unless your abode and wallet can accommodate and afford a full-blown home theatre, is where a slim, low profile, space saving soundbar comes in handy to distinctly upgrade your TV audio with clearer dialogue, richer sound and crisper details. 

In that regard, a well performing soundbar is the audio equivalent to a pair of glasses.

However, with a myriad of models and sheer endless features of varying quality crowding the market, there are a few guiding basics one should consider, e.g. making sure there are three or more channels to simulate surround sound for a more immersive experience and the availability of connectivity options like HDMI Arc, USB and wireless connectivity. 

At the affordable end of the spectrum and as an entry level model, one would be hard-pressed to go past JBL’s compact Bar 2.0 All-In-One soundbar as in terms of ease-of-use, uncluttered functionality with control buttons on top and a simple remote control layout and pronounced simplicity when it comes to the setup, i.e. simply using the HDMI ARC connection and you are in business, it offers a myriad of benefits.

Performance-wise, the Bar 2.0 All-In-One delivers in terms of depth both in the realms of 
low-end reach as well as midrange, with nuances being no less crisply presented in the higher frequencies. 

What I really like about the Bar 2.0 is the way layered, complex sound fields are conveyed  with all nuanced subtleties and tonalities even in bigger rooms without ever lacking punchiness

Stepping things up a few notches is the tour de force that is the JBL’s Bar 5.1 Surround. Imbued with MultiBeam technology that is used in cinema audio systems around the world, it should not be further wondrous that this little number is the epitome of being blissfully submerged in sound.

Comprised of a standard yet oversized soundbar setup with an accompanying wirelessly-connected subwoofer that can be placed wherever one feels like, this minimalist designed soundbar houses five front-facing drivers and two side firing built-in speakers, which results in its bigger size that makes it a veritable unit.

Controls can be easily accessed either via remote control or directly in the middle of the soundbar, with the button given a welcome tactile response. Connectively is ensured via Optical / HDMI inputs, with both AirPlay2 and Chromecast being supported for wireless streaming and the possibility to connect your mobile devices via Bluetooth.

Informed by JBL’s idiosyncratic MultiBeam technology, the sound of this entertainment powerhouse could not be more detailed and spatially-accurate, delivering an audio soundscape equivalent of 3D by not merely maintaining but enhancing intensity, thereby making it one of the most capable soundbars in its class and placing JBL on the firmament of quality home audio providers.

---

image from company website

T • June 20, 2022

The Formative Years – Entombed

Posted by T • June 16, 2022

The Formative Years – Entombed

As far as Scandinavian metal is concerned, Entombed was one of the bands that defined their own idiosyncratic melange based on a well-calibrated mix death metal and hardcore punk influences, which cross-pollinated across underground genres and gave birth to a myriad of epigones.

I was first exposed to Entombed via their album Left Hand Path and when it was released, it left not merely an impression on me but quite a dent on underground music at large as within the context of its time, i.e. the infancy of death metal, with its raw, aggressive approach, it was almost the diametric opposite of the prevalent melodic and progressive metal that was en vogue.

Given the fact that all band members were in their late teens, there was a youthful, unrelenting capturing crusty energy to it, which was accentuated by frenzied thrash, consistently poignant drumming, slow chugging heaviness and innovative riffing that perfectly conveyed the horror themes of the album.

In essence, through condensing the DNA of death metal to its punkish base, Left Hand Path not merely went on to serve as the template for what death rock and the future Swedish sound was to be based on but it created a distinct, ominous sonic aura, i.e. a sound that grabbed one by the throat and would become instantaneously recognizable and inextricably linked to Entombed.

A classic and vitally important album that opened a chasm into another world.

T • June 16, 2022

Rocky Ridge Brewing Anniversary releases

Posted by T • June 15, 2022

Thus Let Us Drink Beer – Rocky Ridge Brewing Anniversary releases

Rocky Ridge Brewing Co is a truly unique entity on the firmament of Australian quality craft beer breweries as its focus is not only set on sustainable practises and locally sourced ingredients, but also on pumping out quality brews that consistently push the envelope without ever running danger of entering novelty territory.

Located South of one of the most remote cities on this earthround, i.e. Perth, in the Margaret River region, all ingredients are grown within the confines of head brewer’s Hamish Coates family farm, with H2O sourced from rainwater and the operations being propelled forward via channeling the power of the sun.

Needless to say, the fact that I have yet to come across a Rocky Ridge release that I do not immensely enjoy does not hurt either, so when I got wind of an array of special releases being released to celebrate their fifth anniversary, I got mildly excited especially as some of those were to be created in collaboration with other craft brewers and thus offered the opportunity to introduce hops from other regions into the mix.

If you have followed this series with an iota of interest it should not come as a surprise that two of my favourite expression from Rocky Ridge’s limited anniversary releases are India Pale Ales, one of which is based on Rocky Ridge joining forces with what could be considered their Australian West Coast equivalent in terms of ingenuity and quality, i.e. Mountain Culture. 

The collaboration culminated in the release of an expression named That John Denver is Full of Sht**, which is quintessentially a tour de force in terms of bold hoppiness, accentuated by dominant citrussy and resinous notes and backed by a distinct bitterness. 
With an ABV clocking in at 10% this dangerously moreish little number makes for a hell of a boilermaker with a dram of Octomore 6.3.

The other DIPA I instantenously fell in love with Rocky Ridge’s hoppy The Shape of Trub to Come, the artwork of which is a thinly veiled homage to Refused (and them imitating Rye Coalition’s  cover artwork of Teen-Age Dance Session,  which in turn was a reference to Dan Terry’s album of the same title).

Based on a melange derived from the best the quartet of El Dorado, Galaxy, Strata and Citra hops have to offer, The Shape of Trub to Come tickles the nostrils upon approach with its punchy aromas and what the nose promised is seamlessly transitioned to the top of the mouth with a pronounced juiciness with only the faintest hint of bitterness. 

An expertly calibrated, sessionable DIPA that sets the mark high for Rocky Ridge’s future releases.

T • June 15, 2022

The Formative Years – Darkthrone No matter if you

Posted by T • June 14, 2022

The Formative Years – Darkthrone

No matter if you think you like what is commonly described as black metal, I dare you to listen to Darkthrone’s dense  and hard hitting 1992 record A Blaze in the Northern Sky as it remains a unique and genre coining record that has to offer so much more than shock value, open-handed clusters of minor chords and tremolo-picked single-note leads. 

While Fenriz remained adamant about using cheap equipment, the clear production creates an unpolished, deliberately primitive and radically simplistic atmosphere that conveys an eerily dark energy, which is only further enhanced by the sombre vocal delivery that punctuates the distortion and steady blast beats. Quintessentially, the album is a nightmarish collage.

Darkthrone never set out to reinvent the wheel and while their brand of sonic assault defied categorizations back in the day, they carefully curated and calculated the ingredients the gnarly, seemingly dilettantish total of which result in something much bigger than what the individual components could be summed up to. 

While A Blaze in the Northern Sky is not remotely near my fave Darkthrone emissions, it blew my mind when I came across it the first time in the mid '90s.

An album that feels like a musical artifact of a troubled time and place and one that successfully brings a vision to life. 

T • June 14, 2022

Latest news stories

Reverend Beat-Man on US soil

Posted in Tours on June 8, 2025

Reverend Beat-Man (Voodoo Rhythm Records) will be in America, announcing a 2025 summer tour that includes sets at Muddy Roots Festival in TN and Recess Romp in CA. The tour, dates listed below, leans heavily on the western section of the country. It is Reverend Beat-Man's first time in the … Read more

An uncertain future from Sloth Fist

Posted in Bands on June 8, 2025

Dallas-Forth Worth based band Sloth Fist has a new EP planned, sharing the title track "Mind Flayers" this week. While the band forme din Austin, various causes have pushed the members into new home cities, spread across 3 states. The EP's b-side is "Denim Demon," A Turbonegro cover -- which … Read more

Back to The Startline Line

Posted in Records on June 7, 2025

The original lineup of The Starting Line has reformed, sharing a new single this week and plans for a new album on Sept. 26. Eternal Youth will be the band's first album in 18 years, releasing on their newly launched Lineage Recordings. It is the fourth album from the band. … Read more

Heartwells sing about lessons learned, announce an EP

Posted in Records on June 7, 2025

LA, CA punk band Heartwells just shared a new single from the band's HEY!FEVER Records debut, an EP called Ollie, out on July 8 on vinyl and digital formats. "'Piss n gums' is a song about taking the beatings in life so much that it almost becomes masochistic. The metaphor … Read more

A Casual Hex Zig Zag Lady Illusion II

Posted in Records on June 7, 2025

On June 13 the Seattle, WA based trio Casual Hex will release a new record, Zig Zag Lady Illusion II, available via Youth Riot Records. The post-punk, no-wave, meets noise rock trio shared a single, "No A," already, and the band shares a member with Big Bite. Read more Casual … Read more

A double Panopticon release

Posted in Records on June 7, 2025

Preorders open on June 13 for two new Panopticon releases, the long-planned dark and melancholic folk album Laurentian Blue, described as a compantion album to ...And Again Into the Light, plus a 3-sided 2xLP Songs of Hiraeth, a compilation of rare material from the On the Subject of Mortality era. … Read more

Live & Dead: 504 Plan from DC

Posted in Records on June 6, 2025

504 Plan, hardcore from Washington, DC, is the focus of DCxPC Live & Dead Vol. 6, announced earlier this month. The "live and dead" concept is a split 12" with one side of live recordings vs. one side in the studio. The band of teenagers chose the name because all … Read more

Umlaut adds Desolё

Posted in Records on June 6, 2025

Melbourne experimental band Umlaut has a new album on July 25, Desolё, coming out on Overdrive Records. The band is built around a trio of Clinton ‘Bär’ McKinnon, Angus Leslie, and Shane Lieber, playing with four to seven members depending on the day, but has recently solidified a four-member lineup. … Read more

Another Assertion (Sunny Day Real Estate)

Posted in Records on June 6, 2025

Assertion, a duo featuring drummer William Goldsmith (Sunny Day Real Estate, Foo Fighters) and vocalist/guitarist Justin Tamminga, has just announced their second album, sharing the lead single "Lock and Load." The band will release Basking In The Gaslight on July 25 via Spartan Records. It's a follow-up to Intermission, released … Read more

Meet Panels (ex-Soviettes)

Posted in Records on June 6, 2025

Minneapolis, MN band Panels will release their debut on June 13, A Great Time To Be An Empath, releasing on Don't Sing record label. The band is led by Annie Sparrows, best known for her work with Soviettes and also playing with Awesome Snakes, God Damn Doo Wop Band, Green/Blue … Read more

Return of The Depth Beneath Us

Posted in Records on June 6, 2025

Post-metal band The Depth Beneath Us, out of Harrisburg, PA, has announced their second album, fittingly called Descent. The album will release on August 1 with the band now sharing the title track (below). The full record spans 10-track and 55-minutes overall. Read more THE DEPTH BENEATH US - LIVE … Read more

"Harmony" by Porcelain

Posted in Records on June 6, 2025

Porcelain just shared the a-side from their upcoming 7" “Harmony” b/w “Torch,” out soon via TODO. The vinyl sill release on July 9, just as the band kicks off a tour with Pelican. “Harmony is a song about loss and how we cope with it," the band says via press … Read more

In The Company Of Serpents In July

Posted in Records on June 6, 2025

July 121 marks the release date for A Crack In Everything from Denver, CO-based doom metal band In The Company Of Serpents. The new album is the band's fifth and marks a more personal approach to songwriting. The album title is a nod to "Anthem" by Leonard Cohen. "I wrote … Read more

Gina Birch (The Raincoats) second solo LP

Posted in Records on June 5, 2025

Gina Birch will release her second solo album in July: Trouble, out July 11 on Third Man Records. It follow's 2023's I Play My Bass Loud. Birch is known for her work with The Raincoats, as well as filmmaking and feminist causes. Read more GINA BIRCH – TOUR DATES 2025 … Read more

New Panther Revival single

Posted in Bands on June 5, 2025

Greenville, TX hardcore trio Panther Revival has a new record in the works, but shared a new politically-tinged track today -- well ahead of its actual release. “I wrote this song last year, and it has sadly only become more lyrically relevant as time has gone on,” vocalist/guitarist Kennedy Rice … Read more

All Leather reimagined

Posted in Records on June 4, 2025

All Leather has announced a reclaiming of their catalog with the upcoming release of a new compilation/anthology collection called Amateur Surgery on Half-Hog Abortion Island. The band featured Nathan Joyner (Psychic Graveyard, Some Girls, Hot Nerds) on guitar, either Jung Sing (Silent, Maniqui Lazer) or Tin Cagayat on drums, and … Read more

The Dropkick Murphys' For The People

Posted in Records on June 4, 2025

Dropkic Murphys have a nuw LP, out digitally on July 4, and then on physical format on Oct. 10 with 5 bonus tracks. Keeping the patriotic angle going, the band will perform this Friday live at The National Mall in Washington, DC at Unite For Veterans Rally on June 6. … Read more

Meet Bones Shredder and Morbid Little Things

Posted in Records on June 3, 2025

Randy Moore, of Get Married, The Moore Family Band, Teens in Trouble, and Spiritworld, as well as Dan Andriano & The Bygones and Lektron, now hsa a solo effort underway too -- Bones Shredder. He will release his solo debut under the Bones Shedder moniker this fall, coming Sept. 19 … Read more

Superchunk sets an appropriate tone for 2025

Posted in Records on June 2, 2025

“It’s always been the case that everyone is going through something that you may not be aware of,” Mac McCaughan of Superchunk says, via press release, when speaking of the band's upcoming new album. “This is currently more true than ever—but also the case that we are all going through … Read more

Today Is The Day summer plans

Posted in Tours on June 2, 2025

Today Is The Day, at work on a new album, has announced both a Rich Hall tribute show performanc ein Brooklyn, NY this summer, plus a North American tour with Buñuel and Murderous Again. The Rich Hall tribute lineup features not only Today Is The Day, but also heavyhitters Converge, … Read more