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#PostPunk

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Floating – Hesitating Lights Review

By Dear Hollow

Back in ’22, your favorite AMG staffers butted heads and said “yeehaw” in a Rodeö whose scores were disappointing, very good, and everything in between. The band was a little Swedish oddity called Floating, whose collision of sounds compiled a library of post-punk’s sneering rhythms, post-metal’s ponderous hugeness, and doom’s lurching intensity, at heart beating with dissonant death metal blood inspired by Demilich and Ulcerate. I found myself on the more favorable side, a little put off by its inconsistencies and experimental quirks, but ultimately excited to see more, and my wish has been granted in follow-up Hesitating Lights.

While entirely more streamlined, a major difference between its predecessor, The Waves Have Teeth, is the heart that beats within it and the crescendo that it embodies. While it uses much of the same tricks, it feels more like a post-punk band doing death metal, punky blastbeats meeting an unfuckwithable bassline, providing the backbone of each track – a flaying guitar and scattered synth forming the amorphous flesh. A tale of two halves, whose stylistic differences are tasteful in a gradual shift from punky energy to death metal disintegration, Hesitating Lights soars in its carefully orchestrated experimental attack, leaving a bit more to be desired, but remains a step towards the greatness that Floating is clearly capable of.

The first half of Hesitating Lights deals in a post-punk style that is both impressively simple and mind-warping. Bass is the starting point in its rich and warm intensity that undergirds a deathened attack that is allowed to waver into various textures of dissonance and darkness, ethereality and irony. Taking cue from the ambivalent bumbling of acts like Cocteau Twins and Siouxsie and the Banshees, warm bass pairs with cold guitar in a collision that feels simultaneously ominous and energetic, taking cues from Ulcerate in contemplative sprawls and blastbeats (“I Reached the Mew,” “Cough Choir”), while motifs of dissonant stings and chiming tones inject a dose of morbidity apt to the descriptor “deathpunk” (“Grave Dog,” “Exit Bag Song”). The first half feels like a carefully curated experiment in punk percussion and bass and death metal melodics and vocals. The result is unique and atmospheric – a bit that feels too safe periodically, but its careful composition shows Floating’s songwriting prowess.

It’s only after the first act that Floating begins to fly off the rails in tasteful death metal dominance. Centerpiece of “Hesitating Lights / Harmless Fires” is a tour-de-force of the more synth-driven experimental tendencies, a patient sprawl that refuses easy categorization into either territory. A nearly post-metal crescendo anchored exclusively by the rumbling bass guitar descends into a noise rock climax not unlike Gilla Band or Lightning Bolt. Beyond that, tracks begin to utilize a cascading riff technique in which guitar rhythms fall apart incrementally across repeated iterations, leading to tasteful slivers of melody and ominous buildups (“Still Dark Enough,” “The Waking”), while doom makes a dirging appearance in the most pitch-black moment of the album (“The Wrong Body”). But even aside from more experimental flair, each track in the second half features a kickass riff that gets the head bobbing and anchors the track in some semblance of reality.

I felt like The Waves Have Teeth was a carpet bomb of ideas with glimpses of its deathpunk actualization shining through. Hesitating Lights feels like a much more fleshed-out beast, with the real teeth to speak of. The shifts between the more post-punk- and death metal-oriented halves can feel jarring, and perhaps that gradual descent into the abyss can be accomplished with a bit more finesse, but it shows the duo’s amorphous quality in a fantastic display for a young band. Ominous death metal atmosphere and rebellious punk energy are harnessed with a kickass bass performance and a shapeshifting percussion in a tidy thirty-six minutes, and it’s infectious. While certainly not the opus magnum Floating is capable of, you should have no hesitation in picking up Hesitating Lights.

Rating: 3.5/5.0
DR: 8 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Transcending Obscurity Records
Websites: floating-label.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/floatingdeathmetal
Releases Worldwide: July 11th, 2025

#2025 #35 #CocteauTwins #DeathMetal #Demilich #DissonantDeathMetal #Floating #GillaBand #HesitatingLights #Jul25 #LightningBolt #NewWave #postPunk #Review #Reviews #SiouxsieAndTheBanshees #SwedishMetal #TranscendingObscurityRecords #Ulcerate

DiscogsDienstag: The Cure – Boys Don’t Cry (Album)

The Cure sind eine meiner Lieblingsbands und gern gehörte Gäste beim GothDiscoInferno. In den bisher 78 Sendungen habe ich 53 Songs von Robert Smith und Co. gespielt, mehr als von jeder anderen Band. Zum heutigen DiscogsDienstag hat mir der Zufall das Album „Boys Don’t Cry“ aus dem Jahre 1980 ausgespuckt. Es ist das erste Compilation-Album von The Cure und erschien nur wenige Monate nach dem Debütalbum „Three Imaginary Boys“. Das ist ungewöhnlich und hatte Marketinggründe. „Three Imaginary Boys“ wurde nämlich nicht in den USA veröffentlicht und anstatt das nachzuholen, wurden die besten Songs des ersten Albums ausgewählt und mit den Single-Veröffentlichungen kombiniert. Die Single „Boys Don’t Cry kam nämlich in den Staaten recht gut an. Das Resultat wurde 1980 zunächst nur in den USA, Kanada, Australien und Deutschland herausgebracht, in England erst 1984.

So wurden das Jimi Hendrix-Cover „Foxy Lady“, „Meat Hook“, „So What“ und „It’s Not You“ durch „Boys Don’t Cry“ (Single), „Plastic Passion“ (B-Seite von „Boys Don’t Cry“), „Jumping Someone Else’s Train“ (Single), „Killing An Arab“ (Single) und den bis dahin unveröffentlichten Song „World War“ ersetzt. Auf der 1988 veröffentlichten CD wurde „Object“ mit „So What“ ersetzt, was ich persönlich schade finde, „World War“, den Robert Smith nicht gut fand, wurde komplett entfernt. Diese Version ist auch bei den Streamingdiensten zu hören.

Die Songs wurden alle in der Ur-Besetzung mit Robert Smith (Gesang, Gitarre), Michael Dempsey (Bass) und Laurence „Lol“ Tolhurst (Drums) eingespielt. Dempsey war allerdings bereits 1979 wegen künstlerischer Differenzen mit Robert Smith ausgestiegen und wurde durch Simon Gallup ersetzt. Zusammen mit dem Keyboarder Mathieu Hartley wurde wenige Monate später „Seventeen Seconds“ mit den Hits „A Forrest“ und „Play For Today“ veröffentlicht, aber das ist eine andere Geschichte.

„Boys Don’t Cry“ gibt einen guten Überblick über die Anfänge von The Cure und den Abschluss ihrer ersten Schaffensphase, denn das eben schon erwähnte Nachfolgealbum zeigt eine deutliche musikalische Weiterentwicklung vom Post-Punk zu Dark-Wave und Gothic-Rock. Nichtsdestotrotz waren „Jumping Someone Else’s Train“, „10.15 Saturday Night“, „Fire In Cairo“, „Killing An Arab“, „Three Imaginary Boys“ und natürlich „Boys Don’t Cry“ wichtige Meilensteine im kreativen Schaffen von The Cure.

🇬🇧 Sigue Sigue Sputnik "Love Missile F1-11" – 1986

An outrageous, hyper-stylized blast of glam, punk and sci-fi. This 12" extended version takes the media-sampling madness and Giorgio Moroder’s robotic pulse even further. A perfect soundtrack for dystopian daydreams and dancefloor rebellion even louder, longer, and more explosive than the single edit...

AU PAIRS
Playing With A Different Sex
2025 Europe MOV reissue
Turquoise #vinyl

Last week before I head to California for a few weeks to go to Disneyland and to do some crate digging.

Getting my week started with some early #80s art punk.
I love this record.

And if any of you come across it, don’t hesitate to buy it. Because it sounds incredible. I’ve never had an original of this, but I can’t imagine even an OG sounding better than this. The popular opinion is that this is superior to the original issue.

The rhythm section on this record in particular sounds fantastic.