Review
Owls
Two

Polyvinyl (2014) Eli Zeger

Owls – Two cover artwork
Owls – Two — Polyvinyl, 2014

Post-hardcore merges the experimentation of noise rock with the energy of hardcore punk. During its first two decades, post-hardcore was pretty underground, but it produced notable acts like ShellacFugazi, and Big Black in the 80’s and ChavezSlint, and Unwound in the 90’s.

In the 2000’s, post-hardcore broke with The Used’s 2003 self-titled album and My Chemical Romance’s 2004 album Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge, achieving gold and platinum status respectively. By this point, the experimental edge and underground roots of post-hardcore had been eradicated for mainstream satisfaction.

Today, bands like I See StarsWe Came As Romans, and Asking Alexandria are desecrating this beautiful genre: their production is too polished, they use generic song titles, and the lead singers sound like they’re on Radio Disney (see I See Stars’ video for “What This Means To Me” if you think I’m just joshing with you). Who will save post-hardcore?

Fortunately, the band Owls retains that classic post-hardcore sound. Thirteen years after their self-titled debut (which happened to be produced by Big Black/Shellac’s Steve Albini), the Chicago quartet has released Two, a time machine that travels back to the golden age of post-hardcore.

The album’s lead single “I’m Surprised...” crosses Built To Spill-like indie with math rock’s odd time signatures and riffage. On first listen, the song seems like a stream of awkward chord progressions, but underneath its oddness, “I’m Surprised...” is a rad power pop song. Lyrically, Owls can be abstract, but also very creepy: on “The Lion...,” lead vocalist Tim Kinsella repetitively sings the line “I’ve seen hornets slaughter honeybees.” The bizarre, eerie imagery it conjures seems like an outtake from Eraserhead. “Ancient Stars Seed...” is musically interesting: it’s instrumentally in D minor, but vocally in D major. This is noteworthy because - since minor keys are sad and major keys are happy - there are conflicting emotions, resulting in massive tension. Other great tracks include the Slint-sounding “It Collects Itself...” and the noise pop storm “A Drop Of Blood...”

Owls aren’t alone in the fight to save post-hardcore. They’re joined by similar acts including Cleveland’s Cloud Nothings and Washington D.C.’s recently reunited The Dismemberment Plan. They've slowly been gaining attention and praise from outlets like Pitchfork and Spin. Who knows. Maybe they’ll overpower the sacrilegious post-hardcore bands, bringing peace on Earth.

Owls – Two cover artwork
Owls – Two — Polyvinyl, 2014

Related news

Jowls signs with Tiny Engines

Posted in Labels on August 31, 2012

Wow, Owls To Break Up

Posted in Splits on December 13, 2005

Wow, Owls! Tourdates / Upcoming Split 7"

Posted in Bands on August 12, 2005

Recently-posted album reviews

Miller Lowlifes

Pinch Hitters
ADD Records (2025)

The debut album from Florida punk band Miller Lowlifes features a vintage baseball theme, best enjoyed with a can of cheap domestic beer in hand. The metaphor fits, as Pinch Hitters focuses on the American dream -- and where it stands in 2025. The vintage educational TV audio clips add to this past-meets-present theme. It's an album that's equally about … Read more

Art Brut

Sorry, That It Doesn't Sound Like It's Planned! Battling Satan, 2009 - 2020
Edsel Records (2025)

I’ve never reviewed a box set before but Art Brut released my favourite sprechgesang anti-art-punk album of the early aughts so I figured I’d give it a go. 2005’s Bang Bang Rock & Roll placed Art Brut among the “Art Wave” scene but was more post-punk revival than “Indie Sleaze”. Argos has cited Jonathan Richman and Axl Rose as his … Read more

The Slow Death

No Light To See
Don’t Sing Records (2025)

Few bands have as fitting a name as The Slow Death. They play forlorn, self-deprecating punk that’s heavily influenced by lonesome country. The music itself is more driving and punchy, but many of the lyrics would fit just well in a somber old-timey country ballad. It’s forceful music that punches inward instead of at The Man. The first song is … Read more