Bearcubbin' Girls With Fun Haircuts (Self-Released)
(pictured above)
[BUBBLE PROG] To relegate Bearcubbin' to the ghetto of "math rock" is a big mistake: Odd meters and frenetic rigging aside, what Girls With Fun Haircuts offers is a lesson in economics rather than long division. Armed with a loop pedal and an endless palette of bizarre tones, guitarist Chris Scott builds to one impossibly dense crescendo of nervous, twitchy fretwork after another, while the frenetic pace-keeping of Mike Byrne, former stand-in drummer for the Smashing Pumpkins, follows the zigzagging structures like a Ritalin-deprived middle-schooler. PETE COTTELL.
Jackson Boone Starlit (Self-Released)
Shitty Weekend Shit Week (Useless State)
Thomas Mudrick Abiqua (Ten Dollar)
[WEIRDO POP] In a town that boasts a burgeoning psychedelic scene and an interest in keeping itself weird, the fact that Thomas Mudrick's Abiqua wasn't the most esteemed album of the year is kind of mind-boggling. From the experimental loopiness of "Earth Nipple Ripple" to the melodious, hippie-happy "Over the Hills," the album is not only one of the catchiest Portland records of 2014 but also the most sonically diverse. Blending country twang, funk and psyched-out garage pop, Abiqua is a bizarre, creative and spiritual journey. ASHLEY JOCZ.
Underlords Take Acid Underlords Take Acid (Rat Planet)
[SLEAZECORE] Edited down from 11 hours of improvisatory jams recorded live to tape, the seven tracks of Underlords Take Acid's self-titled spring debut sharpen a riff-scape of staggered menace with the serrated sleazecore majesty of a Martian grindhouse epic. The so-called "stupor group" of Jonnie Ray Monroe (Fist Fite), Josh Hughes (Rabbits) and Captain John Monsen-Keene (Diesto) planned only a minimal vinyl release through Eolian Empire sister label Rat Planet. But for the face-melting faithful, the local legends' metal-tipped psych maelstrom layers an enrapturing cinematic allure with ballsy abandon and moments of quiet grace. JAY HORTON.
WWeek 2015