This lingering highway is worthless use of state. Can we shift the plates and make the ocean floor explode? Or maybe California will subside and we can watch it sink from the studio apartment of our new Oregon home. We drift apart and start to sink, you seem okay. We shift in sync. We scratch our eyes in disbelief. The road is black, a piercing shade of lifelessness. We shed our skin. Expose our souls. Mix blood and sweat. An open road. The bending signs. Blurred photographs. Receding lines. A burning drop of gold is falling to the sill of the world, it drives us home. We drift apart and start to think, is this okay, hearing you speak through satellites in cryptic speech? The road is lit an eager hue of bright-eyed youth and I need to know what hides behind virescent eyes. We float face up along the interstate. Travel to a different speed, to a different beat. You and I are like where pavement and skyline collide.
supported by 7 fans who also own “We Can't Go Home”
This group is now a thousand feet below and a thousand miles gone but this particular brand of sometimes-declarative, sometimes-pleading, always-emotive music still regularly finds itself in my ears.
The album demands to be experienced and the space it deigns it deserves is evident throughout but most surely in its opener, Brother. It’s accusatory and clearly personal for the lyricist but even so, I’m easily able to place myself in some of the locations the song takes one and it doesn’t relent. yamanogato
supported by 5 fans who also own “We Can't Go Home”
this album feels cosmic in every sense of the word. i feel like a part of something big and important every time i listen to Between Bodies -- it's basicaly like a journey into space. truly inspiring and melancholic as usual. gravewhistle
The Australian punks return with another round of turbo-charged riffs and debauched themes; crack open a cold one and get ready to mosh. Bandcamp New & Notable Mar 10, 2024
New York hardcore meets classic thrash metal meets Jane's Addiction-esque alternative on the Brooklyn crushers' sensational debut. Bandcamp New & Notable Dec 13, 2023