Tuesday May 22, 2012
(0)Millencolin Streams Rarities Collection
Wednesday May 9, 2012
(0)Epitaph Founder Brett Gurewitz Receives...
(0)The Menzingers Announce North American...
Wednesday May 2, 2012
(0)Our Last Night Announce New Tour Dates
Tuesday May 1, 2012
(0)New Pennywise Album In Stores Today
(0)Skip The Foreplay New Album Nightlife...
Thursday April 26, 2012
(0)Pennywise Stream New Album Today
Tuesday April 24, 2012
(0)Skip The Foreplay Stream "Nightlife"
MONDAY JULY 7, 2003
Ikara Colt's "Basic Instructions" EP gets another great review!
While impossibly cool London art-punk squad Ikara Colt impatiently begins work on its second album, North America continues a game of catch-up begun earlier this year with Epitaph's domestic re-release of the band's 2002 debut, Chat And Business LP.
Next up: The five-song (plus one video) EP Basic Instructions (Fantastic Plastic/Epitaph), a brisk, swaggering second helping of the pugilistic pop and thrash Chat And Business offered most thrillingly in bulk. Ikara Colt wears its influences on its sleeves --- much fun can be had by adopting Ian Curtis' voice and intoning "Radio, live transmission..." whenever the bass lines come to the fore on the Chat cut "May B 1 Day" and the grim, buzzing juggernaut "Don't They Know."
But the band's spastic, bash-`til-it-bleeds attack, raw guitars (check Claire Ingram's buzzsaw riffing on the appropriately titled "Panic") and generally confrontational manner carry the day nonetheless. The taut, hissing electro-rock remix of "May B 1 Day" included here, meanwhile, might actually manage to outstrip the other tracks in pure tension.
You were warned.
BEN RAYNER
POP MUSIC CRITIC
www.thestar.com
Next up: The five-song (plus one video) EP Basic Instructions (Fantastic Plastic/Epitaph), a brisk, swaggering second helping of the pugilistic pop and thrash Chat And Business offered most thrillingly in bulk. Ikara Colt wears its influences on its sleeves --- much fun can be had by adopting Ian Curtis' voice and intoning "Radio, live transmission..." whenever the bass lines come to the fore on the Chat cut "May B 1 Day" and the grim, buzzing juggernaut "Don't They Know."
But the band's spastic, bash-`til-it-bleeds attack, raw guitars (check Claire Ingram's buzzsaw riffing on the appropriately titled "Panic") and generally confrontational manner carry the day nonetheless. The taut, hissing electro-rock remix of "May B 1 Day" included here, meanwhile, might actually manage to outstrip the other tracks in pure tension.
You were warned.
BEN RAYNER
POP MUSIC CRITIC
www.thestar.com
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