Generally, I strive for some kind of balance in the âmoodâ of the works featured in the Navigator, but this time around, I suppose I was in some particular state of mind while selecting the featured albums. We start and end this journey with some âyelling musicâ as well as checking in on it a couple of times along the way. The majority, though, is decidedly ânon-yelling,â so balance has still been achieved. Even if âyellingâ isnât what you want to hear, come along on this voyage. Youâll probably still find something you like.
Sick Burn
A Grand Exclamation of GOâ!â-âing (Japan Tour 2019)







Cassette




Sick Burnâs 2018 demo was one of my favorite releases of that year, but other than an excellent split 7-inch with These Bastards in 2021, these Sacramento thrashers have been mostly silent. Or so I thought. They were busy touring Japan, a tour for which this collection was released on CD. Now, one (still ongoing) global pandemic later, itâs been released on cassette by Thrashtapes. This tape includes some songs that people familiar with Sick Burn will recognize (albeit different versions), some newer material, and a couple of cover songs. The riffs fly fast and furious here, but Sick Burn is never shy of breaking up the cacophony with a well-paced breakdown or a scratchy staccato two-step mosh part. Check out the 43-second masterpiece âTear It Up (Burn It Down)â for a small taste of what this sounds like. All of it is wrapped up in a sense of fun, and vocalist Loryâs voice is the perfect register to cut through the blur without overpowering the mix, which is a trick that lots of hardcore bands have trouble pulling off. Sick Burn, though, have it all figured out.
Letâs stick around in the vast #punk tag for a while, moving from a release made by an American band for a Japanese tour to a Colombian band with Japanese hardcore influences.
Nagazaki
PLANETA // CARCEL


Ripping out of the incredibly fertile Bogotá hardcore scene, Nagazakiâs first non-demo release is a blast of abrasive, throat-shredding fury. These four songs of barely-controlled chaos are loud, fast, and angry. If youâve heard Nagazakiâs 2021 demo, youâve heard a couple of these songs already, but hearing them as a studio recording rather than the demoâs âtape-recorder-in-the-corner-of-the-roomâ production style brings new depth. The guitars are clearer here and more biting, owing equal sonic debt to the brittle, piercing style of Dead Kennedysâs East Bay Ray as well as to the â80s Japanese hardcore sound, which, as you can probably tell from the bandâs name and cover art, Nagazaki is influenced by. The latter two tracks on this EP are the most powerful, showing the bandâs mastery of starting at a slow, menacing pace and just when things get good and ominous, shifting into a blistering whirlwind. If you even pretend to like punk and/or hardcore, this is one you donât want to miss.
Iâm confused by the inclusion of the #neo tag, sitting there all alone without a suffix. ââNeoâ what?â you may well ask. I did too, so I dove into it to find out and what I found were charming cover versions of Chinese television show theme songs.
Lhin & Oletar
Memoir of Chinese TV Hits
This albumâa collection of covers of Chinese television themes from Thai duo Lhin & Oletarâ14 gentle, folky tracks built around Oletarâs light, sparking guitar and Lhinâs soothing acrobatic voice. Having never seen, for instance, è¬æ°´å山總æ¯æ (loosely translated, âLove and Passion,â a 1982 love-triangle drama series starring Shaolin Soccerâs Patrick Tse), I can only rely on my imagination while listening to the pastoral, jaunty theme featuring woodblock and whistling. Whether youâre familiar with these shows or not, this album is a fascinating one. Hearing these interpretations might certainly lead to a desire to find out more about the source material. Still, itâs hard not to simply appreciate the talents of the musicians on display here. You donât have to go searching around on the Internet for that component. Youâve already got it right in front of you, and regardless of how deep your knowledge goes, these songs are great.
Lhin & Oletarâs record label is based in #Thailand, and weâll use that tag to jump from Chinese television to a collection of live instrumental performances.
Rattanakosin Breakin Crew
Live Session at Seoul Thai Festival Online 2022


This collection of live recordings from Thai instrumental surf group Rattanakosin Breakin Crew weaves together disparate musical strands into a cohesive whole. There are some elements of unstructured experimentation here, as on the opening track, âHimmaphan Overture,â where the horns provide a foundational drone on which the jazz-influenced melodies are built. Still, thereâs also plenty of melody and groove throughout this collection. The chief joy in these live performances is the playful exchange between the performers. Patterns emerge and loop around each other, each instrument knowing precisely to step into the spotlight and when to fold itself back into the composition as a supporting player. The Thai folk influences with which these recordings are infused really make these tracks stand out. The traditional elements are rarely given center stage; rather, theyâre a unique element that provides variety and grounds these performances in the cultural musical traditions of the artists. Never overpowering, the folk elements are perfectly integrated into these upbeat, energetic works.
Hereâs that #world tag again. Itâs not the best tag as far as description is concerned, encompassing so many various traditions and styles of music, but itâs been around longer than I have, so thereâs not much use fighting against it. Instead of complaining, letâs use the road that it makes available to us to travel from Thai instrumentals to Japanese techno.
å¸å¤§ãã¯ãé¨(ocutechno)
æ¥é¢¨ææ¶


This would be a great compilation of fresh techno sounds no matter where it came from, but the fact that itâs attributed to the âOsaka City University Techno Clubâ is somehow incredibly charming. Itâs hard not to imagine these producers huddled together in the student center, books piled high on the table, piecing these beats together on their laptops. The music itself goes incredibly hard right from the start, opening with the bludgeoning energy of Aquestionâs âIku2edaf.â Whichever member of the club sequenced this album knew what they were doing because that full-frontal attack is followed by three ambient-infused tracks from ã¡ããããªã¿. These tracks still bring high energy and higher BPM counts, but the smooth choral synth beds supporting the freneticism lend a sense of peace and calm. 緲綴 sidesteps the pounding beats of their fellow club members on âå åâ in favor of distorted guitar growls over Berlin School-style arpeggios before bringing the drum machine back on âDunk-an Prototype.â Overall, this compilation is an excellent look at the creative work of a group of students making music simply for the love of creation.
As you know, this collection features students of #Osaka City University. Also based in Osaka (or, at least, claiming to be based there) are a bunch of jokers messing around with Opeth songs.
The Moon City Players
Under the Orchid Moon
Letâs get this out of the way immediately. This is a novelty record, and if youâre not into novelty records, then this isnât for youâbut if you are, then this is one of the best in recent memory. The concept is this: take a 1997 Casio keyboard and a working knowledge of the discography of Swedish progressive metal band Opeth. Use a random number generator to determine a song from their discography, preset rhythm, and BPM, and youâre off. The results are, frankly, spectacular. This experiment re-imagines âHope Leavesâ from Opethâs 2003 all-prog, no metal album Damnation as a jaunty, upbeat pop song. Later, when The Moon City Players get into Opethâs more death metal-influenced material, the results only get funnier. An approximation of Opeth vocalist Mikael à kerfeldtâs growls on âThe Drapery Falls (Jungle Version)â cuts through the weirdness of whatâs already going on here, adding yet another surreal element to the proceedings. Comedy is, of course, subjective. What works for some may not for others. This experiment worked for me, remaining hilarious after multiple listens. Good work, Moon City Players! Youâre a modern-day Dickie Goodman!
From the Moon City Playersâs reinterpretation of #metal, weâll use that tag to get to some actual metal.
Flowers for Burial
Demo 2022


Finding the right combination of inspirations will result in something new and exciting while still being tapped into a tradition or subculture is challenging. Flowers for Burial have succeeded in this difficult task. Here, they balance between dark, ominous atmosphere (see, for example, the slow-build atmosphere of album closer âDeath March/Onwardâ) and straightforward pit-opening capital âRâ Riffs. The latter are present here in abundance. The 47-second âYouthâ opens with a hard, fastcore charge that careens headlong into a brick-wall breakdown thatâll have you pickinâ up change in your spooky hooded druid robe. If you took the slow, doomy brutality of Savannah, Georgia legends Damad and threw it as hard as you could against the palm-muted cinderblock riffs of Gather, the results would put you squarely in Flowers for Burialâs neighborhood. Judging from the results of this powerful demo, thatâs not a bad place to be.
Flowers for Burial list their location #Poughkeepsie, New York, but thereâs another Poughkeepsie in Arkansas, and that oneâs the birthplace of our next artist, one of the lesser-known artists signed by the legendary Sun Records.
Slim Rhodes
Singles for Sun Records


Okay, yes, weâre stretching the concept here to cover multiple releases on one stop, but theyâre all components of the same collectionâthe Sun Records singles of Arkansas country/rockabilly artist Ethmer Cletus âSlimâ Rhodes. Recorded and released in 1955 and 1956, these singles are a fascinating document of an artist searching for a sound that would hit. That search yielded some unique results, specifically the chime-like guitar tone and the studio effect-laden fiddle solo in âBad Girl,â the B-Side to the 1956 Collins Kids-style rocker âGonna Romp and Stomp.â Since weâre dealing with the mid-â50s here, of course, Rhodes takes a shot at aping Elvis on âTake and Giveâ and the more upbeat B-Side âDo What I Do,â a single featuring one of the only recorded vocal performances of Sandy Brooks. Elsewhere, Rhodes and his band lean hard into a country sound, placing the fiddle and steel guitar front and center, especially on the early B-Side lament âAre You Ashamed of Me.â As interesting as these records are as historical documents, that wouldnât matter so much if they werenât actually any good. Fortunately, they were, and still are, almost 70 years later.
From the â50s #country sounds of Arkansas, weâll use that tag to jump to the present day and the other side of the planet to check out some modern country sounds from Australia.
Allison Forbes
Dead Men Tell No Tales



Compact Disc (CD)

On her latest album, Australian country artist Allison Forbes continues to showcase her ability to combine the countryâs past with modern elements to create a fresh, unique sound. The Appalachian folk of album opener âShallow Graveâ gives way to the pop-country sound of âOnly Got One Road,â a song which wouldnât sound out of place on the excellent mid-â90s albums of Jo Dee Messina. Those folk elements pop up again a few times as the album progresses, most impressively on the banjo-driven title track. On âDown to the Waterhole,â that banjo is joined by a snarling blues guitar, creating a foreboding but upbeat mood. A blues influence is also heard on the stomping âAngry in Suburbia,â which features a stuttering, choppy riff on the verses that open into an expansive, hard-charging chorus. The constant throughout this album is Forbesâs voice. Itâs strong, versatile, and more than capable of the depth needed for an album that showcases many of the multiple styles under the âcountryâ umbrella.
Allison Forbes is from #Tamworth, New South Wales, located between Sydney and Brisbane in Eastern Australia. Youâve probably noticed lately that there are quite a few really good hardcore bands in Australis. Well, one of them is from Tamworth.
Serrated
Crown Me King


If you, like me, love âignorant riffâ hardcore, then friend, this is the record for you (us). After a brief tension-building intro (a good intro track is essential in maximizing the brutality of a hardcore record), Serrated positively explodes into the opening punch-to-the-neck riff of âBroken Glass.â Crown Me King isnât one of those six-minute demo affairs, either. Serrated brings the punishment for 10 tracks of pummeling riffs, cavernously deep bass, high-pitched pick sweeps, and shredded-throat vocals. Thereâs a little bit of the âindustrialâ side of hardcore evident here. The Godflesh influence taken to heart by bands like Harmâs Way and Year of the Knife is felt throughout, as in the slowed-down middle of the title track or the wall of distortion that leads into the supremely hard breakdown on âHeavy Eyes,â but this isnât an artsy affair. Serrated is trying to throw out riffs thatâll make you forget how to tie your shoes, breakdowns that make you feel like youâve been rolling around in a rock tumbler. Mission absolutely accomplished.
Thanks for coming along on another trip all over the world. Australiaâs not a bad place to end up. If youâre a fan of hardcore music and arenât familiar with the Australian scenes that have been putting out some really excellent music lately, thatâs a side-quest you can take yourself on when you have the chance. Or, if not, any one of the stops weâve made will branch off into a thousand different destinations. Your favorite new music is waiting for you out there. Go find it.