Pages

Friday, April 24, 2026

Basement : "WIRED"

 



The band's new album brings a late 90s sound that blends indie rock, pop-tinged hooks, and some post-hardcore grit; the vocals add needed grit to belt it out. I like that you can still hear the punk that is in the DNA of this kind of music that originally merged in the 90s. It takes you back to a time when songwriting mattered, as things evolved from the grunge explosion and began to form their own identity. "Dead Weight" shuffles along with help from a driving bassline that keeps the more indifferent tone of the vocals moving. 

There is a more casual tone to "Broken By Design" that ambles along with less aggression, as the singer finds himself more reflective. They move at a brisk pace for "Pick Up the Pieces," which has a more explosive chorus. Things go in the direction of Failure's more introspective moments for "Embrace." If you want just high-energy songs, it is more of a slow burn, but worthwhile, and it stands as a credit to the band for creating a dynamic album.  Then "Sever" has a more rowdy grunge charge as angst comes to a head. The very raw organic quality of the production lends itself to this kind of rowdiness that they continue on with during "The Way I Feel". 

If you are old enough to remember when this kind of music first dropped on MTV'S "120 Minutes' show before grunge broke big, then it's clear the wheel is not being reinvented here. But you can also confirm that they got the mood right. "Satisfy' finds the hook of the vocal melody taking center stage. There is a more downtrodden sonic shade to "Head Alight." It's not quite a ballad, but something that would have been at home on College Radio in 1993.

They have certainly crafted some memorable songs with not much in the way of filler. "Longshot" comes closer to being a ballad. It has a lazy summer strum. Funny enough, the song about summer that closes the album, "Summer's End," is more of a grunge anthem for 2026's definition of the genre. I will give this album a 9.5 as it certainly captured a time period I am fond of, even if it is not one I revisit the most. Not only did they nail the sound, but they also remembered that songs were much better written back then and rose to the occasion. Being released May 8th on Run For Cover Records. 




pst150

No comments:

Post a Comment