Milk Teeth – Vile Child

Every now and then an album comes along that just hits a chord.  It feels like it is made for you.  Which actually makes it hard to review.  It’s difficult talking about things you love, particularly if you are trying to avoid sounding like you have your face buried up their arse.  So say hello to Milk Teeth, my (and hopefully your) favourite new band.

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Panic! At the Disco – The Death of a Bachelor

There are a million albums out there that I don’t like or in which I take absolutely no interest. The number that I actively hate is a lot smaller. It takes something special to make me despise a band and the music that they create. Panic! At the Disco have pulled that off with Death of a Bachelor. Even more impressively, they’ve pulled it off while getting me to like some of the songs.

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Skindred

There’s a common misconception that Skindred are purely a live band.  While there is no denying that you haven’t truly experienced Skindred until you have seen them live.  It does hide the fact that they have one hell of a back catalogue.  While their last album, Kill the Power, seemed to be an attempt to shoot for the stars and may have failed (although I personally quite liked it) their discography to that point had been near flawless.  Joining those lofty standards is Volume and it’s unsurprisingly brilliant.

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Coheed and Cambria

 

Coheed and Cambria are one of those bands who are often taken for granted. Having been an active since 1995 and been releasing albums since 2002, they have almost always been there and it’s sometimes easy to forget just how good they are. A couple of middling albums haven’t helped their cause and bring us to the here and now with The Color Before the Sun, their first album to move away from The Amory Wars storyline. Instead, it finds lead singer and guitarist Claudio Sanchez facing fatherhood and the whole world of responsibilities that come with that. It just happens to also be the best thing they’ve done in years.

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No Devotion – Permanance

Like it or not, Lostprophets were an important band.  They were one of the big players in a movement that saw British rock reassert itself.  What happened after was obviously disgusting, but there were other people in that band and they lost everything due to the actions of one cunt.  Which brings us to No Devotion, the moment where those men wipe themselves down and start again.  Now with Geoff Rickly on vocal duties.

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The Wonder Years

I have a strange relationship with pop-punk.  It played a big part in my early musical education, but in recent years I’ve viewed it as a stale doughnut of a genre.  I’ll probably have a nibble, just out of interest, but ultimately I’m going to put it down and go and get something a little bit tastier.  Every now and then though band comes along that reminds me just why I spent so many hours listening to this stuff.

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Slayer

Slayer and heavy metal go hand in hand.  Enter any gig venue or festival in the world that plays heavy music and somewhere there will be someone wearing a Slayer t-shirt, probably screaming into the air while chugging a bottle of whiskey.  Yet, recent years haven’t been kind to the band.  The sad passing of Jeff Hanneman and the departure of Dave Lombardo sees 2015’s Slayer looking a bit different.

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Bring Me The Horizon – That’s the Spirit

Bring Me the Horizon have been on the verge of going full Hulkamania for a while now.  Their last two albums have been all killer, no filler and backing track aided Reading performances aside, they seem capable of doing no wrong at the moment.  Even the tidal wave of hate that they used to face every time their name popped up on the internet seems to have calmed, at least a little.  Yet is That’s The Spirit good enough to be worthy of the success it seems destined to have?  Or are Bring Me about to pull an Avenged Sevenfold by having one of their weaker albums turn out to be their biggest?

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Iron Maiden – The Book of Souls

Encapsulating an Iron Maiden album into a few hundred measly words is a hard job.  You have to mention the fact that now on their sixteenth album, they are arguably better than they were 40 years ago when Steve Harris started this whole thing.  You could then throw in the fact that live they are still a life affirming experience and doggedly refuse to follow their peers into becoming a heritage act.  After that you’ll probably get round to mentioning the music, which usually defies words anyway.  With The Books of Souls, Maiden seem to have set out to make that process even harder, releasing a double album which is just over an hour and a half in length and includes three songs over ten minutes long.  Here we go anyway.

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