Reviews
Rye Coalition – Curses
Curses sounds like a bad classic rock record that deserves very much to be forgotten

Rye Coalition are one of those few bands left that have been going for a fair share over a decade, and still haven’t found fame, or fizzled out. The group is comprised of five friends since high school: singer Ralph Gregory Cuseglio, guitarist Jon Gonnelli, drummer David Anthony Leto, bassist Justin Angelo Morey, and second guitarist Herbert Wiley. The boys herald from the streets of Jersey City, New Jersey; and have been honing their sound for going on twelve years now. On the overall career release slate, Curses marks only as the Rye Coalition’s fourth full-length studio effort; with the band averaging a release every three years or so. I personally find that ratio positively shocking; as virtually any band with half a shred of musicianship could thrash out cheesy classic/80’s rock tunes like these by the truckload.
What is most shocking about this record is the producer. Take a quick look, and you’ll soon learn that legendary Nirvana drummer, and current Foo Fighter, Dave Grohl was behind the soundboard during the recording process of Curses. In a way, it makes a weird kind of sense. Rye Coalition loosely resembles quality hard rockers Queens of the Stone Age, whom Grohl worked and toured with quite a bit a few years ago. The main difference being where the Queens of the Stone Age occasionally showed amazing versatility and ability in their songwriting prowess, all the Rye Coalition has is the pompous loud guitars, and mindless kiss-off attitude; without any of the likeability and memorability that made the Queens a good band.
With song titles like “Between an I-Roc and a Hard Place,” and “Vietnam Veterinarian,” the misconception that, maybe, this is just a band rockin’ out, and having a good time could possibly be made. Take a short listen though, and you’ll quickly learn that, basically every track here is nothing more than repetitive, mind-numbing garage jams that barely even deserve a home in the garage. Vocalist Cuseglio invokes the ‘postured rock star with nothing to say’ role made so popular in the mid-to-late-80s, and wears it (and screams it) so strongly that it’s almost laughable. You can tell that their aiming for tongue-in-cheek here, but it’s all just so unbelievably derivative that it’s nearly impossible to enjoy. Curses sounds like a bad classic rock record that deserves very much to be forgotten.
(Gern Blandsten)

Reviews
Crossed Keys – Saviors
Saviors shows the work of well-seasoned musicians finding new energy in old sounds

Philadelphia’s Crossed Keys are an interesting intersection between melodic hardcore and punk, taking an earnest approach to the sound that made its way from the underground in the late 90s and early 2000s. This relatively new outfit is the result of Kid Dynamite and Samiam in a blender- in the best way possible. The Kid Dynamite influence may be a given since Crossed Eyes features KD’s drummer Dave Wagenschutz, but the band’s pedigree also includes members of bands like Zolof the Rock & Roll Destroyer and The Curse, all backing the melancholic vocal work of frontman Joshua Alvarez (Halo of Snakes). So while Crossed Keys are somewhat new, its members have been cutting their teeth within their respective circles for years, and their new EP Saviors shows the work of well-seasoned musicians finding new energy in old sounds.
Saviors is backboned by the furious urgency and energy that Kid Dynamite showed through their history, but while Jason Shevchuk’s vocals were beautifully abrasive, Alvarez takes a more restrained, wistful approach to singing. Songs like the opening “Times of Grace” are musically up-tempo percussions and razor-sharp guitars, but are buoyed by Alvarez’s more melodic vocals. His vocals rest at a good place between Samiam’s Jason Beebout and that NYHC tone exhibited by bands like Token Entry and Grey Area. In songs like “R.J.A” and the closing title track, Crossed Keys find more success with their brand of blistering speed meets harmony- slowing down only for the kind of melancholic punk that made Samiam a noted name. While much of Saviors is built on pace, it wasn’t always this way for the band. In fact, their 2017 EP, I’m Just Happy That You’re Here, leans closer to Samiam than it does to Kid Dynamite (the song “Jeff Pelly vs. The Empire” is particularly fantastic), so there’s been an uptick of urgency with Saviors.
For fans of any of the aforementioned bands here, there is plenty to like with Crossed Keys and plenty to like in Saviors. It’s succinct, to the point, but filled with ample reflection and exploration that gives the EP depth and resonance. Any band that has found influence from Kid Dynamite is most certainly OK by us (this site is named after a KD song after all), but Crossed Keys does more than just tip their cap. This one’s a really good one, and worth your time.

Where did Ottawa’s Pine come from? It’s a question worth asking after listening to their painfully gorgeous self-titled debut album. Pine use the phrase “doom and gloom never sounded so sweet” to describe their sound, and true to that, this 11-track outing is filled with the kind of hypnotic melancholia that became the playbook for a great many Midwestern emo bands that emerged in the late 90s/early 2000s. The biggest difference here is that while Pine have the heartbreak down pat, their musical sense of loss is lifted slightly by the airy, more wistful sounds of their guitar-strewn songs. Sure, there’s a lot that sounds like a great Mineral record or a Gloria Record album, but there’s also traces of Florida indie/emo band The Rocking Horse Winner and at times, bands like Rainer Maria.
Pine are buoyed by the great vocal work of Darlene Deschamps. Her voice soars through tracks like “Memento” and the terrific “Lusk”. The latter in particular is a great example of how Pine lull you into a sense of calm before it explodes in a collage of symphonic distortion and post-rock twinkling. In “Sunder” they ascend to louder, more expansive sounds. The song is a great combination of thick, fuzzy guitars, mid-tempo percussion work, and that pained vocal delivery that gives the song an extra punch in the guts.
The album took an impressive 2 years to finish, and you can hear the trials and tribulations of that gestation period through the songs. There’s pain, sadness, anger and frustration in songs like the intro “Within You” and the more new emo-esque “Swollen”, but also beauty, and as the album concludes, a sense of incredible catharsis. The record SOUNDS great too, with production values (by a production team that includes Will Yip, who has helmed records by Circa Survive, Braid, Saosin, and the Bouncing Souls to name a few) adding to the grand cinematic finish of the record.
For those who love what emo was in the mid to late 90s will find much to like about Pine just as much as those who like Explosions in the Sky and their post-rock brethren. Pine have been crafting their sound over the last few years and while their previous EP Pillow Talk showed a solid foundation, this new self-titled record is the work of a band close to the height of their abilities. Moving, beautiful, and littered with life’s roller coaster of emotions as songs, Pine is definitely recommended listening.