It's rock nitrous to boost your week with music from Razor Burn, Calling All Astronauts & Remit
- Music Maniac 1
- Aug 12
- 2 min read
Hit reset to your week with riff heavy rock from Razor Burn, Calling All Astronauts & Remit. Kick back and relax with rock that drives you home:
Razor Burn-Avow
You already met Razor Burn. The acidic, flaming hot rock band from the Land Down Under. When we heard Into the Void, we thought-that’s lightning in a bottle. After listening to Avow, we know it's just talent. The band brings crisp riffs, melodies you can connect with, and the kind of radio rock you probably grew up with. Kids, take notes. Let your music incite feelings and make you want to nod along to it. This track packs more than a punch, bellows with a power of a generator that’s loaded with fuel. Avow plays with half-time tempos, doubling suddenly to create the chugging temptation of a train on the track towards you. Avow says something you always knew about Razor Burn. They were going to deliver unpolished, picture-perfect rock and that’s their promise:
Calling All Astronauts-Pray For Your Soul
Everyone, by default-loves a great riff. It’s nice that Calling All Astronauts have the space to care so much (take note of the pun). Pray For Your Soul was an obvious pick for the playlist. It has a rocking rhythm you wish you operated life by. There are glitchy, digital splotches that make it extremely interesting to listen to. It’s the heartbeat taking a skip to almost vacuum the aspect of time. Like Killing Joke, they tap into a semi-genre sphere I cannot place my finger on. Just like that band, it is creative cohesion, sandwiched together well between a remarkable riff and powerhouse of a song. Noise Against Tyranny is an album that is set to define what the band is out to do. David Bury and Paul McCrudden are out to shine a light on the ugly truth of reality, and they do it masterfully:
Remit-Hills are Shaking
Boys, I liked this song a lot. It’s the perfect long drive track, a great mix of desert rock, sludge and grime years that might take ages to wash off. Hills are Shaking has a bendy riff with a thick bass line that hums with a power. Like an engine, it remains as the core of the track, while the atmospheric waves of the guitar aid the vocals. Alice in Chains’ Stone comes to mind, where the bending riff creates a nasty undertone that adds to the heaviness of the song. Remit make sure their album sounds like a proper rock album. It has all the elements of experimentation, sound detail and tangents that make a coke head sound like a physics professor. The depth of the track messes with your perception. I can see them shaking too:
Rock is your remedy with some incredible indie artists in this playlist, give it a follow!:
