TarantĂŒla: Weird Tales of Radiation and Hate 7"
Second EP from Chicagoâs Tarantula. The band features former members of Culo with the additional layer of the always popular bass player. Musically, Tarantula is just as catchy as Culo, a little less mid tempo, with a more obvious classic punk influence. Great jacket art from DrugFace as per usual. Mastered by Geza X. Killer 7â.
Our take: Second 7â from Chicagoâs Tarantula, and it continues in the vein of their excellent first record. Tarantula are exploring a space that not a lot of bands are interested in these days⊠if the words didnât have such terrible associations I would call this âmelodic hardcore,â i.e. music that has the speed and the gritty sound of early 80s hardcore but relies on the more traditional pop song structure of classic punk rock. The only band I can think of off the top of my head who is doing something similar is Night Birds, but Tarantula is a lot tougher and meaner-sounding. While one might consider the idea of catchy, song-oriented hardcore to be completely played out, Tarantula toe the line between poppy and aggressive so perfectly that their music feels fresh. You can hear the influences quite clearlyâthe snotty, aggressive punk of bands like the Angry Samoans and Zero Boys, the earnest drive of early 80s midwest hardcore like Articles of Faith and early Husker Du, and a dash of Devo / Geza X-style irreverenceâbut theyâre swirled together in a way thatâs just different enough from anything Iâve heard before to be noteworthy.
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TarantĂŒla: Weird Tales of Radiation and Hate 7"
TarantĂŒla: Weird Tales of Radiation and Hate 7"
Second EP from Chicagoâs Tarantula. The band features former members of Culo with the additional layer of the always popular bass player. Musically, Tarantula is just as catchy as Culo, a little less mid tempo, with a more obvious classic punk influence. Great jacket art from DrugFace as per usual. Mastered by Geza X. Killer 7â.
Our take: Second 7â from Chicagoâs Tarantula, and it continues in the vein of their excellent first record. Tarantula are exploring a space that not a lot of bands are interested in these days⊠if the words didnât have such terrible associations I would call this âmelodic hardcore,â i.e. music that has the speed and the gritty sound of early 80s hardcore but relies on the more traditional pop song structure of classic punk rock. The only band I can think of off the top of my head who is doing something similar is Night Birds, but Tarantula is a lot tougher and meaner-sounding. While one might consider the idea of catchy, song-oriented hardcore to be completely played out, Tarantula toe the line between poppy and aggressive so perfectly that their music feels fresh. You can hear the influences quite clearlyâthe snotty, aggressive punk of bands like the Angry Samoans and Zero Boys, the earnest drive of early 80s midwest hardcore like Articles of Faith and early Husker Du, and a dash of Devo / Geza X-style irreverenceâbut theyâre swirled together in a way thatâs just different enough from anything Iâve heard before to be noteworthy.
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Description
Second EP from Chicagoâs Tarantula. The band features former members of Culo with the additional layer of the always popular bass player. Musically, Tarantula is just as catchy as Culo, a little less mid tempo, with a more obvious classic punk influence. Great jacket art from DrugFace as per usual. Mastered by Geza X. Killer 7â.
Our take: Second 7â from Chicagoâs Tarantula, and it continues in the vein of their excellent first record. Tarantula are exploring a space that not a lot of bands are interested in these days⊠if the words didnât have such terrible associations I would call this âmelodic hardcore,â i.e. music that has the speed and the gritty sound of early 80s hardcore but relies on the more traditional pop song structure of classic punk rock. The only band I can think of off the top of my head who is doing something similar is Night Birds, but Tarantula is a lot tougher and meaner-sounding. While one might consider the idea of catchy, song-oriented hardcore to be completely played out, Tarantula toe the line between poppy and aggressive so perfectly that their music feels fresh. You can hear the influences quite clearlyâthe snotty, aggressive punk of bands like the Angry Samoans and Zero Boys, the earnest drive of early 80s midwest hardcore like Articles of Faith and early Husker Du, and a dash of Devo / Geza X-style irreverenceâbut theyâre swirled together in a way thatâs just different enough from anything Iâve heard before to be noteworthy.











