Public Eye: Music For Leisure 12"
Hey, weāre all angry these days. Day in, day out, it feels like all there is to do it kick against the pricks or kick out the jams - sometimes both at the same time. But what do you do when all your righteous anger gets caught up in the mesh of the daily grind? When your despair at the world (and hey, itās boiling over with right-wing fuckheads, senseless violence and the sort of oppression you might once have idealistically hoped would be a thing of the past by now) is a regular, everyday occurrence, as much a part of your daily routine as getting your caffeine fix in the morning?
Ā
If ever a sound articulated that feeling, itād be Public Eyeās second album āMusic For Leisureā. Written in the wake of the US presidential election in 2016, and surrounded by the sinister political voices that seemingly felt legitimised by you-know-who taking the White House, itās the sound of fury, righteous indignation, disillusionment and dejection, all wrapped up inside booming elliptical basslines, staccato guitar stabs and pithily spat summations of the American dream. Opening track āDescendingā has an air of much-loved gloom-rockers Protomartyr in its monochromatic rumble, but the albumās main musical inspirations come from the punked-out nuggets of the infamous āKilled By Deathā compilation series, under the shadow of Wireās art-damaged racket.
Ā
Formed in Portland, Oregon in 2016, Public Eyeās membership takes in three-quarters of notorious punks Autistic Youth, but while that bandās take on rockānāroll was straight-ahead and speedy with it, their new outfit find more inspiration in nuance. āNeat Machines/Red Flagsā slashes at your eardrums with subtly jerky time signatures and angular jangles, before vocalist Nick Vicario remains impassive throughout its tastefully melodic second half. Then thereās the albumās greatest moment: the unabashed skronk of āThe Duetā, which builds to a glorious final minute that sounds like Parquet Courts setting themselves on fire at a free jazz festival. Chaos, in other words, but chaos with the best kind of discipline. Repeats plays reveal greater treasures, and itās the perfect album to block out (or echo) the buzzing pressure on your brain that comes from trying to get through day-to-day life in this increasingly weird era. Beyond that, itās just a really fucking good record. Listen now and save yourself.
Will Fitzpatrick.
Ā
Our take: Itās funny that Public Eyeās first album was titled Relaxing Favorites and this new one is Music for Leisure, because those titles perfectly capture Public Eyeās off-the-cuff approach to punk. Iām sure they put plenty of work into their band, but the recordingsāthis new one in particularāhave a carefree slacker vibe that reminds me of Pavement. The songs amble at stoned-sounding tempos and the vocalist sounds like he rolled out of bed hung over and walked up to the microphone. While the slacker vibe reminds me of Pavement, sonically this is more in line with something like Parquet Courts, particularly the way Public Eye balances pop song craft with more jammed-out, Krautrock-informed elements and even a bit of avant-garde stuff like the skronky saxophone in āThe Duetā and āYouāre Being Laughed At.ā If youāre into thinking personās punk that aims at an audience wider than Maximumrocknrollās former readership, this is a good grip.
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Public Eye: Music For Leisure 12"
Public Eye: Music For Leisure 12"
Hey, weāre all angry these days. Day in, day out, it feels like all there is to do it kick against the pricks or kick out the jams - sometimes both at the same time. But what do you do when all your righteous anger gets caught up in the mesh of the daily grind? When your despair at the world (and hey, itās boiling over with right-wing fuckheads, senseless violence and the sort of oppression you might once have idealistically hoped would be a thing of the past by now) is a regular, everyday occurrence, as much a part of your daily routine as getting your caffeine fix in the morning?
Ā
If ever a sound articulated that feeling, itād be Public Eyeās second album āMusic For Leisureā. Written in the wake of the US presidential election in 2016, and surrounded by the sinister political voices that seemingly felt legitimised by you-know-who taking the White House, itās the sound of fury, righteous indignation, disillusionment and dejection, all wrapped up inside booming elliptical basslines, staccato guitar stabs and pithily spat summations of the American dream. Opening track āDescendingā has an air of much-loved gloom-rockers Protomartyr in its monochromatic rumble, but the albumās main musical inspirations come from the punked-out nuggets of the infamous āKilled By Deathā compilation series, under the shadow of Wireās art-damaged racket.
Ā
Formed in Portland, Oregon in 2016, Public Eyeās membership takes in three-quarters of notorious punks Autistic Youth, but while that bandās take on rockānāroll was straight-ahead and speedy with it, their new outfit find more inspiration in nuance. āNeat Machines/Red Flagsā slashes at your eardrums with subtly jerky time signatures and angular jangles, before vocalist Nick Vicario remains impassive throughout its tastefully melodic second half. Then thereās the albumās greatest moment: the unabashed skronk of āThe Duetā, which builds to a glorious final minute that sounds like Parquet Courts setting themselves on fire at a free jazz festival. Chaos, in other words, but chaos with the best kind of discipline. Repeats plays reveal greater treasures, and itās the perfect album to block out (or echo) the buzzing pressure on your brain that comes from trying to get through day-to-day life in this increasingly weird era. Beyond that, itās just a really fucking good record. Listen now and save yourself.
Will Fitzpatrick.
Ā
Our take: Itās funny that Public Eyeās first album was titled Relaxing Favorites and this new one is Music for Leisure, because those titles perfectly capture Public Eyeās off-the-cuff approach to punk. Iām sure they put plenty of work into their band, but the recordingsāthis new one in particularāhave a carefree slacker vibe that reminds me of Pavement. The songs amble at stoned-sounding tempos and the vocalist sounds like he rolled out of bed hung over and walked up to the microphone. While the slacker vibe reminds me of Pavement, sonically this is more in line with something like Parquet Courts, particularly the way Public Eye balances pop song craft with more jammed-out, Krautrock-informed elements and even a bit of avant-garde stuff like the skronky saxophone in āThe Duetā and āYouāre Being Laughed At.ā If youāre into thinking personās punk that aims at an audience wider than Maximumrocknrollās former readership, this is a good grip.
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Description
Hey, weāre all angry these days. Day in, day out, it feels like all there is to do it kick against the pricks or kick out the jams - sometimes both at the same time. But what do you do when all your righteous anger gets caught up in the mesh of the daily grind? When your despair at the world (and hey, itās boiling over with right-wing fuckheads, senseless violence and the sort of oppression you might once have idealistically hoped would be a thing of the past by now) is a regular, everyday occurrence, as much a part of your daily routine as getting your caffeine fix in the morning?
Ā
If ever a sound articulated that feeling, itād be Public Eyeās second album āMusic For Leisureā. Written in the wake of the US presidential election in 2016, and surrounded by the sinister political voices that seemingly felt legitimised by you-know-who taking the White House, itās the sound of fury, righteous indignation, disillusionment and dejection, all wrapped up inside booming elliptical basslines, staccato guitar stabs and pithily spat summations of the American dream. Opening track āDescendingā has an air of much-loved gloom-rockers Protomartyr in its monochromatic rumble, but the albumās main musical inspirations come from the punked-out nuggets of the infamous āKilled By Deathā compilation series, under the shadow of Wireās art-damaged racket.
Ā
Formed in Portland, Oregon in 2016, Public Eyeās membership takes in three-quarters of notorious punks Autistic Youth, but while that bandās take on rockānāroll was straight-ahead and speedy with it, their new outfit find more inspiration in nuance. āNeat Machines/Red Flagsā slashes at your eardrums with subtly jerky time signatures and angular jangles, before vocalist Nick Vicario remains impassive throughout its tastefully melodic second half. Then thereās the albumās greatest moment: the unabashed skronk of āThe Duetā, which builds to a glorious final minute that sounds like Parquet Courts setting themselves on fire at a free jazz festival. Chaos, in other words, but chaos with the best kind of discipline. Repeats plays reveal greater treasures, and itās the perfect album to block out (or echo) the buzzing pressure on your brain that comes from trying to get through day-to-day life in this increasingly weird era. Beyond that, itās just a really fucking good record. Listen now and save yourself.
Will Fitzpatrick.
Ā
Our take: Itās funny that Public Eyeās first album was titled Relaxing Favorites and this new one is Music for Leisure, because those titles perfectly capture Public Eyeās off-the-cuff approach to punk. Iām sure they put plenty of work into their band, but the recordingsāthis new one in particularāhave a carefree slacker vibe that reminds me of Pavement. The songs amble at stoned-sounding tempos and the vocalist sounds like he rolled out of bed hung over and walked up to the microphone. While the slacker vibe reminds me of Pavement, sonically this is more in line with something like Parquet Courts, particularly the way Public Eye balances pop song craft with more jammed-out, Krautrock-informed elements and even a bit of avant-garde stuff like the skronky saxophone in āThe Duetā and āYouāre Being Laughed At.ā If youāre into thinking personās punk that aims at an audience wider than Maximumrocknrollās former readership, this is a good grip.











