Archives for posts with tag: Maximum Rock n Roll

Shifters

Mastering The Shifters “Creggan Shops” on It Takes Two Records.

One of my favourite records to have worked on in 2016!

“There’s more than a few moments on the debut single from Melbourne, Australia’s the Shifters that suggest, at least as far as I can tell, that they might be more than a little familiar with the work of Mark E. Smith and company. The deadpan male/female vocal pairing and minimalist rhythmic repetition, repetition, repetition worked into “Creggan Shops” and “Captain Hindsight” sound like they’ve been lovingly traced from the blueprints of the Fall’s’ early, scrappy glory days (Live at the Witch Trials through Hex Enduction Hour, if you’re keeping score), with all of that band’s tightly-wound paranoia, if slightly less of a sense of imminent and inevitable volatile self-destruction. But the Shifters are equally capable of twisting their sound into a fractured, low-fidelity pop sprawl that takes some further cues from the scrappy, rough and tumble sounds of the early-to-mid ‘80s Flying Nun Records catalog, with that particular synthesis of inspirations serving as an implicit reminder that the Fall had, in their heyday, conquered the Top 20 charts in New Zealand. After this record, the Shifters really deserve no less for themselves. 
-Erika Elizabeth (Maximum Rock’n’Roll, Futures and Pasts radio)”

Buy it here!

 

Daylight Robbery

Mastering a new Daylight Robbery 7″ to coincide with their Australian tour.

Facebook event link.

Fri 5th July – at The Public Bar (melbourne)
DEAF WISH // WHITE WALLS// DAYLIGHT ROBBERY // BLOODY HAMMER
https://www.facebook.com/events/371813552933278/?fref=ts

Sat 6th July – at The Metro (adelaide)
BIG RICHARD INSECT // DAYLIGHT ROBBERY // DEEP HEAT //BRUFF SUPERIOR
https://www.facebook.com/events/559158324114524/?fref=ts

Sun 7th July – at Mad Mouse (adelaide)
NO ACTION // DAYLIGHT ROBBERY // TRASH // SIMFUCKERS
https://www.facebook.com/events/174805806004751/?fref=ts

Wed 10th – at Brisbane Hotel (tasmania)
DAYLIGHT ROBBERY // + 3 more
https://www.facebook.com/events/325381690898037

Thurs 11th July – Launceston TBC (tasmania)
DAYLIGHT ROBBERY // + 3 more
https://www.facebook.com/events/479644075434767

Fri 12th July – brisbane at TBC
DAYLIGHT ROBBERY // + 3 more

Sat 13th July – brisbane at TBC
DAYLIGHT ROBBERY // + 3 more

Thurs 18th July – at The Terrace Bar (Newcastle)
INFINITE VOID // DAYLIGHT ROBBERY // LENIN LENNON // HAZARDS
https://www.facebook.com/events/308025002660331/?fref=ts

Fri 19th July – at The Imperial Hotel (sydney)
ROYAL HEADACHE // DAYLIGHT ROBBERY //+ 2 more

Sat 20th July – at Blackwire Records (sydney)
INFINITE VOID // DAYLIGHT ROBBERY // THORAX // COLLAPSO
https://www.facebook.com/events/145681128936383

Sun 21st July – at The Gasometer (melbourne)
STRAIGHTJACKET NATION // DAYLIGHT ROBBERY // DEEP HEAT // GENTLEMEN
https://www.facebook.com/events/137283203117858/?fref=ts

You don’t have to be a music critic to hear a little John and Exene in this south-side three-piece’s male-female vocal interplay, but Daylight Robbery doesn’t stop with X… They combine the short sharp bursts of late-70s west-coast bands like the Bags and the Wipers with the present-day energy of sweat-soaked Pilsen house shows.

http://daylightrobbery.bandcamp.com/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J9Rd9I6NQ54

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HVfyBsIPJS4

Fri 5th till Sun 21st July

If you haven’t heard their newest LP, mastered here, listen below.

 

Daylight Robbery

Mastering a new Daylight Robbery 7″ to coincide with their Australian tour.

Facebook event link.

Fri 5th July – at The Public Bar (melbourne)
DEAF WISH // WHITE WALLS// DAYLIGHT ROBBERY // BLOODY HAMMER
https://www.facebook.com/events/371813552933278/?fref=ts

Sat 6th July – at The Metro (adelaide)
BIG RICHARD INSECT // DAYLIGHT ROBBERY // DEEP HEAT //BRUFF SUPERIOR
https://www.facebook.com/events/559158324114524/?fref=ts

Sun 7th July – at Mad Mouse (adelaide)
NO ACTION // DAYLIGHT ROBBERY // TRASH // SIMFUCKERS
https://www.facebook.com/events/174805806004751/?fref=ts

Wed 10th – at Brisbane Hotel (tasmania)
DAYLIGHT ROBBERY // + 3 more
https://www.facebook.com/events/325381690898037

Thurs 11th July – Launceston TBC (tasmania)
DAYLIGHT ROBBERY // + 3 more
https://www.facebook.com/events/479644075434767

Fri 12th July – brisbane at TBC
DAYLIGHT ROBBERY // + 3 more

Sat 13th July – brisbane at TBC
DAYLIGHT ROBBERY // + 3 more

Thurs 18th July – at The Terrace Bar (Newcastle)
INFINITE VOID // DAYLIGHT ROBBERY // LENIN LENNON // HAZARDS
https://www.facebook.com/events/308025002660331/?fref=ts

Fri 19th July – at The Imperial Hotel (sydney)
ROYAL HEADACHE // DAYLIGHT ROBBERY //+ 2 more

Sat 20th July – at Blackwire Records (sydney)
INFINITE VOID // DAYLIGHT ROBBERY // THORAX // COLLAPSO
https://www.facebook.com/events/145681128936383

Sun 21st July – at The Gasometer (melbourne)
STRAIGHTJACKET NATION // DAYLIGHT ROBBERY // DEEP HEAT // GENTLEMEN
https://www.facebook.com/events/137283203117858/?fref=ts

You don’t have to be a music critic to hear a little John and Exene in this south-side three-piece’s male-female vocal interplay, but Daylight Robbery doesn’t stop with X… They combine the short sharp bursts of late-70s west-coast bands like the Bags and the Wipers with the present-day energy of sweat-soaked Pilsen house shows.

http://daylightrobbery.bandcamp.com/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J9Rd9I6NQ54

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HVfyBsIPJS4

Fri 5th till Sun 21st July

If you haven’t heard their newest LP, mastered here, listen below.

 

Occult Detective Club‘s new 7″, mastered here,  Maximum Rock n Roll review.

IMG_4744x

 

youthavoiders (1)

Youth Avoiders Time Flies 7″, mastered here, reviewed at Punknews.org.

“This four-track EP by French band Youth Avoiders is a lesson in how to get in, do your stuff (and do it well) and get out. Youth Avoiders manage to do this in eight minutes and hammer away with an abandon that doesn’t do anything to detract from the songs, with everything including the kitchen sink being thrown in.

All four songs are extremely upbeat in pace, with a guitar sound that jangles more than it does sound like a buzzsaw-if anything the sound of the guitar is reminiscent of that employed in White Lung. The drumming is frenetic and to be honest, I know there is some bass in there but it plays more of a holding role than being prominent in any way. That being said, the rhythm section does a grand job of keeping this runaway train on track.

First track “Run” is notable for including “regress no way” in the lyrics but this is no 7 Seconds sound-alike band as the song crashes along with more of a thrashy garage sound than a thick melodic punk one. “Boredom Airline” is basically about a plane crashing into the sea and again is performed at 100 mph, whilst “Red Eyes” is the track that sticks the most in my head with a yelled vocal that sounds desperate to the extreme. It is also the longest track on the single and just has a great sense of urgency to it which helps to mark it out over the three other songs. Next comes “Outro,” which seems as if it is almost a Youth Avoiders theme song with the only decipherable words being “youth” and “avoiders,” with the third and final word possibly being “yeah” or something along those lines. It’s fast, frantic and final.

This kind of release would be equally at home on labels like Dirt Cult Records and Deranged Records so if you like the stuff they put out then this might tickle your fancy too. Youth Avoiders are also a band that needs to release an album of this stuff.”

Original Post Here

 

Daylight Robbery – Ecstatic Vision LP, mastered here, Maximum Rock n Roll Review:

Daylight Robbery

 

Friends of Cesar Romero 7″ mastered here, out on Snappy Little Numbers and reviewed in Maximum Rock n Roll!

FOCR

 

Discover – Food for the Warmachine EP mastered here, out on Rawmantic Disasters and reviewed in Maximum Rock n Roll!

IMG_4279x

 

Heavy Nukes new 7″ mastered here, reviewed in Maximum Rock n Roll!

Heavy Nukes MRR Review

 

Heavy Nukes new 7″ mastered here, reviewed in Maximum Rock n Roll!

Heavy Nukes MRR Review