Heavy Track of the Week is a characteristic on Heavy Consequence breaking down the highest metallic, punk, and exhausting rock tracks you have to hear each Friday. This week, No. 1 goes to GWAR for his or her Kurt Ballou-mixed single “Lot Lizard.”
“Lot Lizard” is a reminder that beneath the huge costumes and copious layers of comedic satire, GWAR are nonetheless a rattling good band. This Kurt Ballou-mixed observe is arguably the most effective the Scumdogs have ever sounded from a recording/constancy standpoint, and the band ship a scuzzy punk-thrash ripper that’s a pure ’80s throwback. It kinda sounds just like the crossover thrash of future tourmates Poisonous Holocaust.
And depart it to GWAR to make the music about one thing hilariously disgusting — on this case, a “crack-addicted cross-dressing dinosaur prostitute that shreds wieners at truck cease pickle parks,” within the phrases of the one-and-only Blothar the Berserker. GWAR’s intensive touring schedule seems to be to be paying dividends with some tour-tight studio output, as “Lot Lizard” is certainly one of three model new originals included on the upcoming mini-album, The Return of Gor Gor. An NSFW music video will be seen right here.
Honorable Mentions:
Bush – “60 Methods to Overlook Individuals”
“60 Methods to Overlook Individuals” is the primary tease of Bush’s new album I Beat Loneliness, and it showcases the private and unguarded nature of Gavin Rossdale’s lyrics on the band’s tenth studio LP. Spacey verses of muted instrumentation put Rossdale’s sultry voice entrance and heart, and he carries the music right into a refrain drop of surging guitars, the band tapping right into a little bit of shoegaze. Contemplating the emphasis on the lyrics, such a music calls for a robust vocal efficiency, and Rossdale sounds implausible right here.
The Satan Wears Prada – “For You”
“For You” nearly seems like two completely different songs smashed into one. The start portion is a confessional ballad sung by Mike Hranica that’s finally subverted right into a crushing train in managed breakdowns, because the vocals flip into screams. The Satan Wears Prada are undoubtedly embracing extra of an alt-pop sound right here, however it’s nonetheless heavy sufficient to, A, make our rundown, and B, appease the band’s metalcore contingent.
Youth Code – “In Search of Tomorrow”
Youth Code meld industrial, hyperpop, and hardcore into two-and-a-half minutes of sonic ache on “In Search of Tomorrow.” Not for the faint hearted or simply harshed, the Los Angeles EBM duo unleash the floodgates on its newest single, as grinding electronics and bass frequencies rain down in a seemingly random barrage. For followers of traditional industrial reminiscent of Entrance 242 and Cabaret Voltaire, in addition to trendy electro-industrial auteurs reminiscent of Poppy and HEALTH.