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Knowso: Rare Auld Trip / Psychological Garden 12"
All caught up with last Augustâs blast of herky-jerky darkness from Knowso? Donât get too comfy, now - nine months later, theyâre back with another eight hits of visceral smarts and discombobulating fury. Sounding, as ever, like Big Black firing pellets of snot at their Cleveland forebears Devo, âRare Auld Trip/Psychological Gardenâ finds them picking up where they left off with âSpecialtronics Green Visionâ. This being the best part of a year on from that excellent debut, though, they sound wiser, snarkier and more pissed off than ever before - good news all round, then.
Opener âBoredom In The Valleyâ reintroduces their signature tricks but feels more focused; a sub-two minute blast of staggered beats powered by the gnarliest-sounding bass this side of Bob Weston, and a disaffected vocal styling that youâd be tempted to call nihilist if you couldnât sense the number of fucks given beneath the impassive facade. They pick up the pace with âStaring At The Spiralâ, which almost sounds like the Buzzcocks unravelling at the seams while a Vogon watches on, before crashing into the smashânâgrab antics of âThe Plantsâ - one of the recordâs clear highlights and a frantic, dizzying trip. Along the way are enough bon mots and smartarse quips too make you wonder if theyâre taking this as seriously as they should. Letâs not spoil the highlights in advance, but if youâre already on board with Knowso, youâll know theyâre simultaneously utterly hilarious and unquestionably, deadly serious.
âI could never be friends with a fucker such as you,â they snarl disgustedly on another of the recordâs instant classics, but by this point youâll already have given your heart over to this most delirious of post-punk/noise-rock hybrids. As the closing cacophony of voices on â4th Wonderâ will no doubt drive into your brain with overwhelming force, âRare Auld Trip/Psychological Gardenâ (you pays your money and you takes your choice with the title, presumably) is not to be missed.
Will Fitzpatrick
Our take: I feel like I never hear people talking about them, but for me Clevelandâs Knowso is one of the most distinctive and exciting punk bands currently putting out music. Maybe they havenât caught on because itâs easy to get into the weeds thinking / talking / writing about everything surrounding their music. (Like, for instance, that there are at least three bandsâKnowso, Cruelster, and Perverts Againâthat share members and sound very similar, or that all of Knowsoâs releases feature distinctive artwork from cartoonist Nathan Ward, who seems to be the bandâs driving force, handling bass, guitar, and vocals.) However, when I put all of that shit aside, when I just put on this record and listen to it, I am fucking blown away every time. While Iâm not 100% confident in my ability to distinguish Knowso, Cruelster, and Perverts Again in a blind taste taste, the sound here is instantly identifiable and utterly distinctive. Just like when you see a red Coke can and you know what it is no matter what language or script âCoca-Colaâ is written in, once you hear this nervous, jittery punk with the paranoid-sounding, speak-sung vocals, you know you have landed squarely in this different universe (via Cleveland). And not only is the sound distinctive, itâs fucking great. The rhythms are so precise, creative, and memorable, similar to what bands like Lithics or Fitness Womxn are doing but much tighter, faster, and more confrontational. The riffs are also outstanding, and Knowso has great two-guitar dynamics, something Iâm always a sucker for. All of that would make for an excellent band or record, but what pushes Knowso over the top for me are the lyrics. Iâve trained myself to ignore bland and even bad lyrics, but that is not a problem here. Actually, these lyrics are so great that Iâm happy to sit and read the lyric sheet without putting the record on. I love lyrics (and other types of word art) that present you with a potent image and just sort of leave it there for you to roll around in your brain. (Iâm reminded of an interview with Ian Mackaye where he pointed out the line âthe milk bottles stand emptyâ in Wireâs song âEx-Lion Tamer,â noting how that image said so little but so much at the same time.) Here are some of my favorite cryptic bits of wisdom: from âTurning Planet,â âTurning planet / I see you spin / a hundred miles in my shoes;â from âBoredom in the Valley,â âOld neighbor in the night car / Gotta sloppy gait when he walk to the car / Two way radio no signal / Ke8dyv.â I love those more cryptic lines, but itâs not just free jazz word salad. âYou Lick the Bootâ engages with the whole BLM / Defund the Police conversation, while âThe Plantsâ is the environmentalist anthem only Knowso could write. Long story short, the eight songs on this record are modern punk masterpieces. Maybe theyâre too weird for you, but theyâre everything I want from punk. All hail Knowso.
Opener âBoredom In The Valleyâ reintroduces their signature tricks but feels more focused; a sub-two minute blast of staggered beats powered by the gnarliest-sounding bass this side of Bob Weston, and a disaffected vocal styling that youâd be tempted to call nihilist if you couldnât sense the number of fucks given beneath the impassive facade. They pick up the pace with âStaring At The Spiralâ, which almost sounds like the Buzzcocks unravelling at the seams while a Vogon watches on, before crashing into the smashânâgrab antics of âThe Plantsâ - one of the recordâs clear highlights and a frantic, dizzying trip. Along the way are enough bon mots and smartarse quips too make you wonder if theyâre taking this as seriously as they should. Letâs not spoil the highlights in advance, but if youâre already on board with Knowso, youâll know theyâre simultaneously utterly hilarious and unquestionably, deadly serious.
âI could never be friends with a fucker such as you,â they snarl disgustedly on another of the recordâs instant classics, but by this point youâll already have given your heart over to this most delirious of post-punk/noise-rock hybrids. As the closing cacophony of voices on â4th Wonderâ will no doubt drive into your brain with overwhelming force, âRare Auld Trip/Psychological Gardenâ (you pays your money and you takes your choice with the title, presumably) is not to be missed.
Will Fitzpatrick
Our take: I feel like I never hear people talking about them, but for me Clevelandâs Knowso is one of the most distinctive and exciting punk bands currently putting out music. Maybe they havenât caught on because itâs easy to get into the weeds thinking / talking / writing about everything surrounding their music. (Like, for instance, that there are at least three bandsâKnowso, Cruelster, and Perverts Againâthat share members and sound very similar, or that all of Knowsoâs releases feature distinctive artwork from cartoonist Nathan Ward, who seems to be the bandâs driving force, handling bass, guitar, and vocals.) However, when I put all of that shit aside, when I just put on this record and listen to it, I am fucking blown away every time. While Iâm not 100% confident in my ability to distinguish Knowso, Cruelster, and Perverts Again in a blind taste taste, the sound here is instantly identifiable and utterly distinctive. Just like when you see a red Coke can and you know what it is no matter what language or script âCoca-Colaâ is written in, once you hear this nervous, jittery punk with the paranoid-sounding, speak-sung vocals, you know you have landed squarely in this different universe (via Cleveland). And not only is the sound distinctive, itâs fucking great. The rhythms are so precise, creative, and memorable, similar to what bands like Lithics or Fitness Womxn are doing but much tighter, faster, and more confrontational. The riffs are also outstanding, and Knowso has great two-guitar dynamics, something Iâm always a sucker for. All of that would make for an excellent band or record, but what pushes Knowso over the top for me are the lyrics. Iâve trained myself to ignore bland and even bad lyrics, but that is not a problem here. Actually, these lyrics are so great that Iâm happy to sit and read the lyric sheet without putting the record on. I love lyrics (and other types of word art) that present you with a potent image and just sort of leave it there for you to roll around in your brain. (Iâm reminded of an interview with Ian Mackaye where he pointed out the line âthe milk bottles stand emptyâ in Wireâs song âEx-Lion Tamer,â noting how that image said so little but so much at the same time.) Here are some of my favorite cryptic bits of wisdom: from âTurning Planet,â âTurning planet / I see you spin / a hundred miles in my shoes;â from âBoredom in the Valley,â âOld neighbor in the night car / Gotta sloppy gait when he walk to the car / Two way radio no signal / Ke8dyv.â I love those more cryptic lines, but itâs not just free jazz word salad. âYou Lick the Bootâ engages with the whole BLM / Defund the Police conversation, while âThe Plantsâ is the environmentalist anthem only Knowso could write. Long story short, the eight songs on this record are modern punk masterpieces. Maybe theyâre too weird for you, but theyâre everything I want from punk. All hail Knowso.
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Knowso: Rare Auld Trip / Psychological Garden 12"
Knowso: Rare Auld Trip / Psychological Garden 12"
All caught up with last Augustâs blast of herky-jerky darkness from Knowso? Donât get too comfy, now - nine months later, theyâre back with another eight hits of visceral smarts and discombobulating fury. Sounding, as ever, like Big Black firing pellets of snot at their Cleveland forebears Devo, âRare Auld Trip/Psychological Gardenâ finds them picking up where they left off with âSpecialtronics Green Visionâ. This being the best part of a year on from that excellent debut, though, they sound wiser, snarkier and more pissed off than ever before - good news all round, then.
Opener âBoredom In The Valleyâ reintroduces their signature tricks but feels more focused; a sub-two minute blast of staggered beats powered by the gnarliest-sounding bass this side of Bob Weston, and a disaffected vocal styling that youâd be tempted to call nihilist if you couldnât sense the number of fucks given beneath the impassive facade. They pick up the pace with âStaring At The Spiralâ, which almost sounds like the Buzzcocks unravelling at the seams while a Vogon watches on, before crashing into the smashânâgrab antics of âThe Plantsâ - one of the recordâs clear highlights and a frantic, dizzying trip. Along the way are enough bon mots and smartarse quips too make you wonder if theyâre taking this as seriously as they should. Letâs not spoil the highlights in advance, but if youâre already on board with Knowso, youâll know theyâre simultaneously utterly hilarious and unquestionably, deadly serious.
âI could never be friends with a fucker such as you,â they snarl disgustedly on another of the recordâs instant classics, but by this point youâll already have given your heart over to this most delirious of post-punk/noise-rock hybrids. As the closing cacophony of voices on â4th Wonderâ will no doubt drive into your brain with overwhelming force, âRare Auld Trip/Psychological Gardenâ (you pays your money and you takes your choice with the title, presumably) is not to be missed.
Will Fitzpatrick
Our take: I feel like I never hear people talking about them, but for me Clevelandâs Knowso is one of the most distinctive and exciting punk bands currently putting out music. Maybe they havenât caught on because itâs easy to get into the weeds thinking / talking / writing about everything surrounding their music. (Like, for instance, that there are at least three bandsâKnowso, Cruelster, and Perverts Againâthat share members and sound very similar, or that all of Knowsoâs releases feature distinctive artwork from cartoonist Nathan Ward, who seems to be the bandâs driving force, handling bass, guitar, and vocals.) However, when I put all of that shit aside, when I just put on this record and listen to it, I am fucking blown away every time. While Iâm not 100% confident in my ability to distinguish Knowso, Cruelster, and Perverts Again in a blind taste taste, the sound here is instantly identifiable and utterly distinctive. Just like when you see a red Coke can and you know what it is no matter what language or script âCoca-Colaâ is written in, once you hear this nervous, jittery punk with the paranoid-sounding, speak-sung vocals, you know you have landed squarely in this different universe (via Cleveland). And not only is the sound distinctive, itâs fucking great. The rhythms are so precise, creative, and memorable, similar to what bands like Lithics or Fitness Womxn are doing but much tighter, faster, and more confrontational. The riffs are also outstanding, and Knowso has great two-guitar dynamics, something Iâm always a sucker for. All of that would make for an excellent band or record, but what pushes Knowso over the top for me are the lyrics. Iâve trained myself to ignore bland and even bad lyrics, but that is not a problem here. Actually, these lyrics are so great that Iâm happy to sit and read the lyric sheet without putting the record on. I love lyrics (and other types of word art) that present you with a potent image and just sort of leave it there for you to roll around in your brain. (Iâm reminded of an interview with Ian Mackaye where he pointed out the line âthe milk bottles stand emptyâ in Wireâs song âEx-Lion Tamer,â noting how that image said so little but so much at the same time.) Here are some of my favorite cryptic bits of wisdom: from âTurning Planet,â âTurning planet / I see you spin / a hundred miles in my shoes;â from âBoredom in the Valley,â âOld neighbor in the night car / Gotta sloppy gait when he walk to the car / Two way radio no signal / Ke8dyv.â I love those more cryptic lines, but itâs not just free jazz word salad. âYou Lick the Bootâ engages with the whole BLM / Defund the Police conversation, while âThe Plantsâ is the environmentalist anthem only Knowso could write. Long story short, the eight songs on this record are modern punk masterpieces. Maybe theyâre too weird for you, but theyâre everything I want from punk. All hail Knowso.
Opener âBoredom In The Valleyâ reintroduces their signature tricks but feels more focused; a sub-two minute blast of staggered beats powered by the gnarliest-sounding bass this side of Bob Weston, and a disaffected vocal styling that youâd be tempted to call nihilist if you couldnât sense the number of fucks given beneath the impassive facade. They pick up the pace with âStaring At The Spiralâ, which almost sounds like the Buzzcocks unravelling at the seams while a Vogon watches on, before crashing into the smashânâgrab antics of âThe Plantsâ - one of the recordâs clear highlights and a frantic, dizzying trip. Along the way are enough bon mots and smartarse quips too make you wonder if theyâre taking this as seriously as they should. Letâs not spoil the highlights in advance, but if youâre already on board with Knowso, youâll know theyâre simultaneously utterly hilarious and unquestionably, deadly serious.
âI could never be friends with a fucker such as you,â they snarl disgustedly on another of the recordâs instant classics, but by this point youâll already have given your heart over to this most delirious of post-punk/noise-rock hybrids. As the closing cacophony of voices on â4th Wonderâ will no doubt drive into your brain with overwhelming force, âRare Auld Trip/Psychological Gardenâ (you pays your money and you takes your choice with the title, presumably) is not to be missed.
Will Fitzpatrick
Our take: I feel like I never hear people talking about them, but for me Clevelandâs Knowso is one of the most distinctive and exciting punk bands currently putting out music. Maybe they havenât caught on because itâs easy to get into the weeds thinking / talking / writing about everything surrounding their music. (Like, for instance, that there are at least three bandsâKnowso, Cruelster, and Perverts Againâthat share members and sound very similar, or that all of Knowsoâs releases feature distinctive artwork from cartoonist Nathan Ward, who seems to be the bandâs driving force, handling bass, guitar, and vocals.) However, when I put all of that shit aside, when I just put on this record and listen to it, I am fucking blown away every time. While Iâm not 100% confident in my ability to distinguish Knowso, Cruelster, and Perverts Again in a blind taste taste, the sound here is instantly identifiable and utterly distinctive. Just like when you see a red Coke can and you know what it is no matter what language or script âCoca-Colaâ is written in, once you hear this nervous, jittery punk with the paranoid-sounding, speak-sung vocals, you know you have landed squarely in this different universe (via Cleveland). And not only is the sound distinctive, itâs fucking great. The rhythms are so precise, creative, and memorable, similar to what bands like Lithics or Fitness Womxn are doing but much tighter, faster, and more confrontational. The riffs are also outstanding, and Knowso has great two-guitar dynamics, something Iâm always a sucker for. All of that would make for an excellent band or record, but what pushes Knowso over the top for me are the lyrics. Iâve trained myself to ignore bland and even bad lyrics, but that is not a problem here. Actually, these lyrics are so great that Iâm happy to sit and read the lyric sheet without putting the record on. I love lyrics (and other types of word art) that present you with a potent image and just sort of leave it there for you to roll around in your brain. (Iâm reminded of an interview with Ian Mackaye where he pointed out the line âthe milk bottles stand emptyâ in Wireâs song âEx-Lion Tamer,â noting how that image said so little but so much at the same time.) Here are some of my favorite cryptic bits of wisdom: from âTurning Planet,â âTurning planet / I see you spin / a hundred miles in my shoes;â from âBoredom in the Valley,â âOld neighbor in the night car / Gotta sloppy gait when he walk to the car / Two way radio no signal / Ke8dyv.â I love those more cryptic lines, but itâs not just free jazz word salad. âYou Lick the Bootâ engages with the whole BLM / Defund the Police conversation, while âThe Plantsâ is the environmentalist anthem only Knowso could write. Long story short, the eight songs on this record are modern punk masterpieces. Maybe theyâre too weird for you, but theyâre everything I want from punk. All hail Knowso.
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All caught up with last Augustâs blast of herky-jerky darkness from Knowso? Donât get too comfy, now - nine months later, theyâre back with another eight hits of visceral smarts and discombobulating fury. Sounding, as ever, like Big Black firing pellets of snot at their Cleveland forebears Devo, âRare Auld Trip/Psychological Gardenâ finds them picking up where they left off with âSpecialtronics Green Visionâ. This being the best part of a year on from that excellent debut, though, they sound wiser, snarkier and more pissed off than ever before - good news all round, then.
Opener âBoredom In The Valleyâ reintroduces their signature tricks but feels more focused; a sub-two minute blast of staggered beats powered by the gnarliest-sounding bass this side of Bob Weston, and a disaffected vocal styling that youâd be tempted to call nihilist if you couldnât sense the number of fucks given beneath the impassive facade. They pick up the pace with âStaring At The Spiralâ, which almost sounds like the Buzzcocks unravelling at the seams while a Vogon watches on, before crashing into the smashânâgrab antics of âThe Plantsâ - one of the recordâs clear highlights and a frantic, dizzying trip. Along the way are enough bon mots and smartarse quips too make you wonder if theyâre taking this as seriously as they should. Letâs not spoil the highlights in advance, but if youâre already on board with Knowso, youâll know theyâre simultaneously utterly hilarious and unquestionably, deadly serious.
âI could never be friends with a fucker such as you,â they snarl disgustedly on another of the recordâs instant classics, but by this point youâll already have given your heart over to this most delirious of post-punk/noise-rock hybrids. As the closing cacophony of voices on â4th Wonderâ will no doubt drive into your brain with overwhelming force, âRare Auld Trip/Psychological Gardenâ (you pays your money and you takes your choice with the title, presumably) is not to be missed.
Will Fitzpatrick
Our take: I feel like I never hear people talking about them, but for me Clevelandâs Knowso is one of the most distinctive and exciting punk bands currently putting out music. Maybe they havenât caught on because itâs easy to get into the weeds thinking / talking / writing about everything surrounding their music. (Like, for instance, that there are at least three bandsâKnowso, Cruelster, and Perverts Againâthat share members and sound very similar, or that all of Knowsoâs releases feature distinctive artwork from cartoonist Nathan Ward, who seems to be the bandâs driving force, handling bass, guitar, and vocals.) However, when I put all of that shit aside, when I just put on this record and listen to it, I am fucking blown away every time. While Iâm not 100% confident in my ability to distinguish Knowso, Cruelster, and Perverts Again in a blind taste taste, the sound here is instantly identifiable and utterly distinctive. Just like when you see a red Coke can and you know what it is no matter what language or script âCoca-Colaâ is written in, once you hear this nervous, jittery punk with the paranoid-sounding, speak-sung vocals, you know you have landed squarely in this different universe (via Cleveland). And not only is the sound distinctive, itâs fucking great. The rhythms are so precise, creative, and memorable, similar to what bands like Lithics or Fitness Womxn are doing but much tighter, faster, and more confrontational. The riffs are also outstanding, and Knowso has great two-guitar dynamics, something Iâm always a sucker for. All of that would make for an excellent band or record, but what pushes Knowso over the top for me are the lyrics. Iâve trained myself to ignore bland and even bad lyrics, but that is not a problem here. Actually, these lyrics are so great that Iâm happy to sit and read the lyric sheet without putting the record on. I love lyrics (and other types of word art) that present you with a potent image and just sort of leave it there for you to roll around in your brain. (Iâm reminded of an interview with Ian Mackaye where he pointed out the line âthe milk bottles stand emptyâ in Wireâs song âEx-Lion Tamer,â noting how that image said so little but so much at the same time.) Here are some of my favorite cryptic bits of wisdom: from âTurning Planet,â âTurning planet / I see you spin / a hundred miles in my shoes;â from âBoredom in the Valley,â âOld neighbor in the night car / Gotta sloppy gait when he walk to the car / Two way radio no signal / Ke8dyv.â I love those more cryptic lines, but itâs not just free jazz word salad. âYou Lick the Bootâ engages with the whole BLM / Defund the Police conversation, while âThe Plantsâ is the environmentalist anthem only Knowso could write. Long story short, the eight songs on this record are modern punk masterpieces. Maybe theyâre too weird for you, but theyâre everything I want from punk. All hail Knowso.
Opener âBoredom In The Valleyâ reintroduces their signature tricks but feels more focused; a sub-two minute blast of staggered beats powered by the gnarliest-sounding bass this side of Bob Weston, and a disaffected vocal styling that youâd be tempted to call nihilist if you couldnât sense the number of fucks given beneath the impassive facade. They pick up the pace with âStaring At The Spiralâ, which almost sounds like the Buzzcocks unravelling at the seams while a Vogon watches on, before crashing into the smashânâgrab antics of âThe Plantsâ - one of the recordâs clear highlights and a frantic, dizzying trip. Along the way are enough bon mots and smartarse quips too make you wonder if theyâre taking this as seriously as they should. Letâs not spoil the highlights in advance, but if youâre already on board with Knowso, youâll know theyâre simultaneously utterly hilarious and unquestionably, deadly serious.
âI could never be friends with a fucker such as you,â they snarl disgustedly on another of the recordâs instant classics, but by this point youâll already have given your heart over to this most delirious of post-punk/noise-rock hybrids. As the closing cacophony of voices on â4th Wonderâ will no doubt drive into your brain with overwhelming force, âRare Auld Trip/Psychological Gardenâ (you pays your money and you takes your choice with the title, presumably) is not to be missed.
Will Fitzpatrick
Our take: I feel like I never hear people talking about them, but for me Clevelandâs Knowso is one of the most distinctive and exciting punk bands currently putting out music. Maybe they havenât caught on because itâs easy to get into the weeds thinking / talking / writing about everything surrounding their music. (Like, for instance, that there are at least three bandsâKnowso, Cruelster, and Perverts Againâthat share members and sound very similar, or that all of Knowsoâs releases feature distinctive artwork from cartoonist Nathan Ward, who seems to be the bandâs driving force, handling bass, guitar, and vocals.) However, when I put all of that shit aside, when I just put on this record and listen to it, I am fucking blown away every time. While Iâm not 100% confident in my ability to distinguish Knowso, Cruelster, and Perverts Again in a blind taste taste, the sound here is instantly identifiable and utterly distinctive. Just like when you see a red Coke can and you know what it is no matter what language or script âCoca-Colaâ is written in, once you hear this nervous, jittery punk with the paranoid-sounding, speak-sung vocals, you know you have landed squarely in this different universe (via Cleveland). And not only is the sound distinctive, itâs fucking great. The rhythms are so precise, creative, and memorable, similar to what bands like Lithics or Fitness Womxn are doing but much tighter, faster, and more confrontational. The riffs are also outstanding, and Knowso has great two-guitar dynamics, something Iâm always a sucker for. All of that would make for an excellent band or record, but what pushes Knowso over the top for me are the lyrics. Iâve trained myself to ignore bland and even bad lyrics, but that is not a problem here. Actually, these lyrics are so great that Iâm happy to sit and read the lyric sheet without putting the record on. I love lyrics (and other types of word art) that present you with a potent image and just sort of leave it there for you to roll around in your brain. (Iâm reminded of an interview with Ian Mackaye where he pointed out the line âthe milk bottles stand emptyâ in Wireâs song âEx-Lion Tamer,â noting how that image said so little but so much at the same time.) Here are some of my favorite cryptic bits of wisdom: from âTurning Planet,â âTurning planet / I see you spin / a hundred miles in my shoes;â from âBoredom in the Valley,â âOld neighbor in the night car / Gotta sloppy gait when he walk to the car / Two way radio no signal / Ke8dyv.â I love those more cryptic lines, but itâs not just free jazz word salad. âYou Lick the Bootâ engages with the whole BLM / Defund the Police conversation, while âThe Plantsâ is the environmentalist anthem only Knowso could write. Long story short, the eight songs on this record are modern punk masterpieces. Maybe theyâre too weird for you, but theyâre everything I want from punk. All hail Knowso.











