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Dollhouse: The First Day of Spring 7"
Dollhouseās newest plaything. Four songs to accessorize your still life.
Our take: Has Toxic State Recordsā now-established routineātaking New York City punk bands, wrapping their music in rough-sounding recordings, then wrapping those inconspicuous-looking records in gallery-worthy packaging that grows increasingly elaborate over the yearsāstarted to go stale? FUCK NO! In fact, itās been over a year since the last Toxic State vinyl release and Iām fiending for a fix. One thing I love about a new Toxic State release coming out is that you can expect the unexpected. One release might be a straightforward raw punk band, the next might be industrial, the one after that art pop⦠and plenty of them donāt fit into any category. So, when I dropped the needle on Dollhouseās new 7ā (following up the very popular demo they released in 2019), I was only mildly surprised at the melodic lead guitar that starts āThe Shadow Baby.ā Itās the kind of riff that could have gotten you a contract and a few thousand dollars of advance money from Jade Tree Records in the late 90s, but Dollhouse pair it with a vocalist who (Iām guessing) saw a lot of Crazy Spirit gigs and makes a sound Iād describe as a snotty squawk-scream. The second song is a full-on, Dawn of Humans-style buzzsaw, but then by the end of the record there are acoustic guitars. Itās a wild ride. But it rules, and it feels like a ride Iāve never been on before. This is why I buy every single Toxic State release.
Our take: Has Toxic State Recordsā now-established routineātaking New York City punk bands, wrapping their music in rough-sounding recordings, then wrapping those inconspicuous-looking records in gallery-worthy packaging that grows increasingly elaborate over the yearsāstarted to go stale? FUCK NO! In fact, itās been over a year since the last Toxic State vinyl release and Iām fiending for a fix. One thing I love about a new Toxic State release coming out is that you can expect the unexpected. One release might be a straightforward raw punk band, the next might be industrial, the one after that art pop⦠and plenty of them donāt fit into any category. So, when I dropped the needle on Dollhouseās new 7ā (following up the very popular demo they released in 2019), I was only mildly surprised at the melodic lead guitar that starts āThe Shadow Baby.ā Itās the kind of riff that could have gotten you a contract and a few thousand dollars of advance money from Jade Tree Records in the late 90s, but Dollhouse pair it with a vocalist who (Iām guessing) saw a lot of Crazy Spirit gigs and makes a sound Iād describe as a snotty squawk-scream. The second song is a full-on, Dawn of Humans-style buzzsaw, but then by the end of the record there are acoustic guitars. Itās a wild ride. But it rules, and it feels like a ride Iāve never been on before. This is why I buy every single Toxic State release.
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Dollhouse: The First Day of Spring 7"
Dollhouse: The First Day of Spring 7"
Dollhouseās newest plaything. Four songs to accessorize your still life.
Our take: Has Toxic State Recordsā now-established routineātaking New York City punk bands, wrapping their music in rough-sounding recordings, then wrapping those inconspicuous-looking records in gallery-worthy packaging that grows increasingly elaborate over the yearsāstarted to go stale? FUCK NO! In fact, itās been over a year since the last Toxic State vinyl release and Iām fiending for a fix. One thing I love about a new Toxic State release coming out is that you can expect the unexpected. One release might be a straightforward raw punk band, the next might be industrial, the one after that art pop⦠and plenty of them donāt fit into any category. So, when I dropped the needle on Dollhouseās new 7ā (following up the very popular demo they released in 2019), I was only mildly surprised at the melodic lead guitar that starts āThe Shadow Baby.ā Itās the kind of riff that could have gotten you a contract and a few thousand dollars of advance money from Jade Tree Records in the late 90s, but Dollhouse pair it with a vocalist who (Iām guessing) saw a lot of Crazy Spirit gigs and makes a sound Iād describe as a snotty squawk-scream. The second song is a full-on, Dawn of Humans-style buzzsaw, but then by the end of the record there are acoustic guitars. Itās a wild ride. But it rules, and it feels like a ride Iāve never been on before. This is why I buy every single Toxic State release.
Our take: Has Toxic State Recordsā now-established routineātaking New York City punk bands, wrapping their music in rough-sounding recordings, then wrapping those inconspicuous-looking records in gallery-worthy packaging that grows increasingly elaborate over the yearsāstarted to go stale? FUCK NO! In fact, itās been over a year since the last Toxic State vinyl release and Iām fiending for a fix. One thing I love about a new Toxic State release coming out is that you can expect the unexpected. One release might be a straightforward raw punk band, the next might be industrial, the one after that art pop⦠and plenty of them donāt fit into any category. So, when I dropped the needle on Dollhouseās new 7ā (following up the very popular demo they released in 2019), I was only mildly surprised at the melodic lead guitar that starts āThe Shadow Baby.ā Itās the kind of riff that could have gotten you a contract and a few thousand dollars of advance money from Jade Tree Records in the late 90s, but Dollhouse pair it with a vocalist who (Iām guessing) saw a lot of Crazy Spirit gigs and makes a sound Iād describe as a snotty squawk-scream. The second song is a full-on, Dawn of Humans-style buzzsaw, but then by the end of the record there are acoustic guitars. Itās a wild ride. But it rules, and it feels like a ride Iāve never been on before. This is why I buy every single Toxic State release.
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-70%Dollhouse: The First Day of Spring 7"ā
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Description
Dollhouseās newest plaything. Four songs to accessorize your still life.
Our take: Has Toxic State Recordsā now-established routineātaking New York City punk bands, wrapping their music in rough-sounding recordings, then wrapping those inconspicuous-looking records in gallery-worthy packaging that grows increasingly elaborate over the yearsāstarted to go stale? FUCK NO! In fact, itās been over a year since the last Toxic State vinyl release and Iām fiending for a fix. One thing I love about a new Toxic State release coming out is that you can expect the unexpected. One release might be a straightforward raw punk band, the next might be industrial, the one after that art pop⦠and plenty of them donāt fit into any category. So, when I dropped the needle on Dollhouseās new 7ā (following up the very popular demo they released in 2019), I was only mildly surprised at the melodic lead guitar that starts āThe Shadow Baby.ā Itās the kind of riff that could have gotten you a contract and a few thousand dollars of advance money from Jade Tree Records in the late 90s, but Dollhouse pair it with a vocalist who (Iām guessing) saw a lot of Crazy Spirit gigs and makes a sound Iād describe as a snotty squawk-scream. The second song is a full-on, Dawn of Humans-style buzzsaw, but then by the end of the record there are acoustic guitars. Itās a wild ride. But it rules, and it feels like a ride Iāve never been on before. This is why I buy every single Toxic State release.
Our take: Has Toxic State Recordsā now-established routineātaking New York City punk bands, wrapping their music in rough-sounding recordings, then wrapping those inconspicuous-looking records in gallery-worthy packaging that grows increasingly elaborate over the yearsāstarted to go stale? FUCK NO! In fact, itās been over a year since the last Toxic State vinyl release and Iām fiending for a fix. One thing I love about a new Toxic State release coming out is that you can expect the unexpected. One release might be a straightforward raw punk band, the next might be industrial, the one after that art pop⦠and plenty of them donāt fit into any category. So, when I dropped the needle on Dollhouseās new 7ā (following up the very popular demo they released in 2019), I was only mildly surprised at the melodic lead guitar that starts āThe Shadow Baby.ā Itās the kind of riff that could have gotten you a contract and a few thousand dollars of advance money from Jade Tree Records in the late 90s, but Dollhouse pair it with a vocalist who (Iām guessing) saw a lot of Crazy Spirit gigs and makes a sound Iād describe as a snotty squawk-scream. The second song is a full-on, Dawn of Humans-style buzzsaw, but then by the end of the record there are acoustic guitars. Itās a wild ride. But it rules, and it feels like a ride Iāve never been on before. This is why I buy every single Toxic State release.











