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We still don t know when Every Time I Die will release their ninth album, or what it will even be called, but they re keeping the new music coming with their third new single, AWOL.
The song follows the joint release of Colossal Wreck and Desperate Pleasures, which came out in December, months after the band confirmed that their follow-up to 2016 s
Low Teens was finished. This is the longest the Buffalo-based band has gone without releasing a new record, but AWOL does enough in just over two minutes to keep fans satiated for the time being. AWOL is a cement-cracking offering from Every Time I Die, who are on a streak of dishing out some of the heaviest material they ve ever recorded. Marked by lunging rhythms, overt dissonance and atonal breakdowns, this latest single is a violent mosher that should leave fans foaming at the mouth for a return to in-person concerts. In the meantime, mind your bedroom furniture and try not to put any holes in the sheetrock.
OUTBURN ONLINE
December 10, 2020
PHOTOGRAPHS BY ANABEL DFLUX
Lead guitarist Marc Motley of Los Angeles based mathcore band The Arson Choir talks about the band’s diverse influences, what it’s like trying to grow an up-and-coming band during a pandemic, politics and racial divisions in America, and whether metal is the best media in which to address them. The Arson Choir released its second ferocious EP
Invisible Monsters in early October and is known locally in the LA scene for the band’s frenetic live performances.
The Arson Choir is a young band, having just released your sophomore EP
Invisible Monsters. How was it putting out new music during a pandemic so early in your career? Did you have any hesitations?
Crowbar London s Black Heart. CREDIT: Jessica Lotti/Black Heart Crowdfunder
London venue The Black Heart has revealed that it’s in “serious trouble” unless it raises £100,000 to avoid permanent closure.
It comes after the Camden bar and live venue, which has had no financial help from the government or its landlords, spent a year adapting to meet government guidelines so that it could continue to trade through the coronavirus pandemic.
“We were closed for months only to reopen at less than half our capacity and with hardcore restrictions,” the venue said in a statement. “We still managed to successfully put on 11 socially distanced gigs and 8 live streams, but it was not enough to keep us going.”
The heavy-metal humorists of
Two Minutes to Late Night helped us all get through 2020 with their awesome star-studded Bedroom Covers video series (remember that one where members of Tool, Primus, Mastodon and Coheed covered Rush?), and now they ve announced a new livestream endeavor, Splitsville. The series will see corpse-painted master of ceremonies Gwarsenio Hall and Co. roping in two bands we love to cover a song from each other s catalog. The kickoff episode features Every Time I Die and Cave In, and is set to premiere on January 29th at 8 p.m. ET. Tickets are on sale now, and it ll be available to watch for 24 hours.