Artist: Be Your Own Pet
Album: Get Awkward
Label: XL Recordings
Release: Now!
Sounds Like: An explosion in a pop-rocks and coke factory

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Album number 2 from Nashville’s Be Your Own Pet is an intense rush; so much so that it makes their self-titled debut seem like a wooden-wheeled Skoda. Those of you familiar with their output can expect 35 minutes of furiously fast punk rock shenanigans that will no doubt leave you with a racing pulse, shattered nerves and in desperate need of a cold glass of ale.

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Opening track ‘Super Soaked’ is a prime example of what to expect, hitting the listener hard with its high-speed guitars and thunderous drumbeats. It doesn’t let up from here. After vocalist Jemina Pearl’s scream of ‘look out world ‘cos I wanna have fun!’ it slams into ‘Black Hole’ with extreme gusto and Ramones-punk vigour. ‘Heart Throb’ tells of a tale of teenage lust, giving nods towards a distinctly 90’s pop-punk flavour of song-writing.

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They slow things down on ‘Becky’, a track which involves Jemina recounting a tale of a falling out between her and the protagonist (one that seems to end in the death of ‘Becky’ as the reference to “going to juvie for teenage homicide” and the singer feeling unremorseful, blaming Becky for the whole debacle.

Awkward Much?

Don’t expect any deep philosophical questions and theories to be raised in the next 11 tracks. They mostly concern things that Be Your Own Pet hold close to their hearts; i.e. partying, sex, food, relationships and erm…zombies?! Lyrically, it’s pretty immature, but who says punk rock has to be serious? Hey, Blink-182 made an entire career out of dick and fart jokes in their tracks so yammering on about ‘acting like a jerk’ and ‘popping pills’ is acceptable really. Plus, for them it would seem so out of character to create an album full of incredibly dull, piss-water indie rock wouldn’t it? I mean, growing up fucking sucks, so let’s have as much fun as possible! Tracks like the caustic frenzy of ‘Bitches Leave’ and the rabble-rousing chants of ‘Bummer Time’ are an excellent example of their spiky, uncompromising attitude.

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You’re a Waste’ dips its toe in the fountain of emo with its sombre overtones and Jemina’s blasé ‘I’m glad you’ve got a broken heart’ vocals. Any memory of this is blow out of the water by the noisy double-attack of the pizza-throwing pop anthem ‘Food Fight’ and the hammer-horror rock ‘n’ roll of ‘Zombie Graveyard Party!’- Easily one of the best tracks they’ve ever recorded.

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Those of you looking for an album that sounds like the Yeah Yeah Yeahs playing Ramones songs, ‘Get Awkward’ is an excellent and suitably bonkers place to start – it will blow yr mind.

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Sounds

To listen to ‘Zombie Graveyard Party!‘ from ‘Get Awkward‘ click below!

Get the Flash Player to see the wordTube Media Player.

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Links

Be Your Own Pet
Be Your Own Myspace
XL Records
Infinity Cat

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Tearin’ It Up Along Rock Sound Route 108

Uno!

It’s that time again! This month’s Rock Sound CD is brought to you by the number 108, which is precisely the number of cards in a Uno deck - fancy! 108 is also the name of a Hare Krishna hardcore band - crikey. Anyway, 108 also happens to be the number of April’s cover CD. Will it be a drastic improvement on last months? (Actually, there was some okay stuff on last months in the form of HEALTH, Cursed and The Ocean so it’s not all bad.) Let’s see….

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1. Children of Bodom - Blooddrunk (edit)

A delicate keyboard-led opening that’s pummelled to bits by a quite formulaic metal attack that sadly doesn’t get any better as the grating and indignant vocals kick in. The inclusion of the hardcore chants of the song’s title, win this track a few more points and the solo at the 2.30 mark is an unexpected delight.

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2. A Girl A Gun A Ghost - Lizard in the Lights

Despite the shit-awful band name, A Girl A Gun A Ghost are actually pretty good. Their sound drops someone around the region of a cleaner-sounding Poison The Well, with an odd southern-metal twang. Unfortunately, it all goes a bit “Gallows” near the end, which is a shame. The Victory Records crowd would probably love this though.

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3. Thieves & Liars - When Dreams Become Reality

The opening bars of this smacked so much of “Woman” by Wolfmother, I became quite concerned. Instead, Thieves & Liars thump out some quite expansive riff-heavy rock “n” roll. Whilst not being particularly memorable, it makes a fresh change from yet another macho, ham-fisted dirge of idiot-metal.

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4. The Death Of Her Money - Clap!

Have you ever tried to drag a bag of wet potatoes around? I’d imagine it’s an arduous and plodding process, much like the first 3 minutes of “Clap” by The Death Of Her Money. Sounding like a poor-man’s Hey Colossus with a “tagged on’ zany progressive outro isn’t winning any smiles here - poor.

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5. City and Colour - Confessions

I think what stands Dallas Green out from other acoustic acts, is his ‘”I’ve fallen into an ocean of rich, warm tea”- vocals. Okay, so this might well be a sappy Dashboard by numbers, acoustic strum-a-thon, but his voice is a convincing, earnest instrument in itself that works in painting a picture of his low-fi campfire-emo. Great!

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6. Frank Turner - Imperfect Tense

Although I’m a massive Million Dead fan, Frank Turner’s solo work has never really captured me. “Imperfect Tense” moves away from the folk-vibes of his earlier work and stumbles down a jaunty, pub-sing along vibe and smacks of being “too safe.’ Gone are his strong political statements, replaced with a somewhat mediocre cry. Disappointing, as I really wanted to like this.

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7. Kill Hannah - Believer

Proof that Myspace-electro-scenester bullshit still isn’t dead. Horrible.

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8. Outl4w - No More Survivors

I thought I would hate this. The picture of the singer gurning at me from the article within Rock Sound was enough to make the blood boil, as was the “4″ in their name. But you know what, these guys are great. It’s like they’ve taken the best elements of Rancid, chucked in some U.S. Bombs and dunked their instruments in a thick layer of grime for good measure. Street-punk that’s worth a listen - good work lads.

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9. The Gutter Twins - Idle Hands

The only thing I really know about Mark Lanegan, was that he used to be in Queens of the Stone Age. Gutter Twins, were therefore something I considered to retain a similar swagger. In some places it does, albeit a more stripped down and feral one. “Idle Hands” is a dirty, groove-laden number best suited played from an open-topped Chevy, doing 80 down a dust road. Awesome.

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10. The Sword - Fire Lances Of The Ancient Hyperzephyrians

With a name like “The Sword” and that frankly ridiculous song title, this metal/stoner rock mob must play Warhammer or at least Dungeons & Dragons. It smacks so much of Fantasy battles, it’s untrue. I couldn’t imagine anyone but those wearing “Gary Gygax: Rollin’ In His Grave” t-shirts, who wank over sexy elves and hyper-ventilate when they’re in the same room as a girl listening to this. Epic Fail.

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11. The Swamp Donkey - The Trouble With Crusades

With a name like The Swamp Donkey, this is exactly what I was expecting. Sludge coated bass heavy stoner rock that tries to be even sleazier than a male P.E. teacher in an all-girls school and as cumbersome as a truck load of dead pandas. If you’re after something with riff after riff and some nice Fu Manchu-cowbell antics, then The Swamp Donkey are worth investigating.

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12. Suicide Silence - Bludgeoned To Death

About as subtle as an anvil to the head, Suicide Silence deliver some hilariously bad metal. Tinny drums? Check. Gargled vocals? Check. The most uninspiring, turgid guitar work ever? Check. Horrendous.

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13. Azriel - Against The Wind

Azriel seem to fancy themselves as speed metal merchants it seems. However, they ruin it all with some predictable breakdowns that ruin the speed/timing/nature of the whole track. By the time they get back on track the damage has been done and all I can do is wait until the next plodding segment cuts in. Poor.

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14. Trigger The Bloodshed - Lovers

I’m not even going to bother reviewing this. Instead, I’m going to talk about episode 11 on season 4 of The Shield. The Strike Team are sort of back together and are investigating the death of two officers from the Barn. They’ve recovered a gun and a radio that belonged to the dead cops as well as 3 possible suspects, whilst Dutch and Claudette are investigating a shooting at a carwash. Oh yeah and Dutch is seeing Vic’s ex-wife - nice.

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15. Dead Child - Black Halo Rider

For a minute I thought this was Iron Maiden. Dead Child’s vocalist, Dahm sounds so much like Bruce Dickinson, it’s scary. The instrumental work also gives nods to the godfather’s of British metal, albeit a rawer, serrated sound with none of the wicked guitar-solos and falsetto shrieks. Sinister and a good finish to what has been quite a disappointing trawl.

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Links

See above, I’m going to chainsaw some Locusts in half.

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By Ross Macdonald

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Return of the Mac: The Bloodening Part 3

As promised in the mixtape post, yet another installment of ‘Mad Mac Reviews’. It’s been quite a while since the last, so he’s pulled out the stops to make this one extra harsh. He’s putting me out of a job with this quality of writing, seriously.

(If you want your band reviewed by Mad Mac or anyone else on the writing team, drop us an e-mail/carrier pigeon/shout really loudly.)

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Foals - Cassius (Transgressive)

The opening bars brought me back to the days of George Formby with his ukulele; I wish it hadn’t. I long thought those days were dead and gone - fortunately hearing the rest, I realised they had. On two occasions I thought mercifully that the CD had stuck, but it moved on to a thankful finale. The lyrics took very little learning as it seemed to be the word ‘Cassius’ repeated over and over. I’m not sure why, but at least it gave the song a title.

Small horses that play the ukulele? LOL

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This Will Destroy You - Threads (Magic Bullet Records)

When this track started, I felt finally that there would be a track that I could listen to. This was a completely different type of music, which turned out to be one long session of opening bars. A bit like sex with lots of foreplay and no grand conclusion. I did wonder if the sound man had put his pizza on the controls and if this had caused the music to accidentally blur, which gave them the sense of improving it, not so! (I’ve no idea what this means. - Ross)

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Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds - DIG, LAZARUS, DIG! (Mute)

The phrase ‘Lazarus dig yourself‘ is repeated throughout the track and I’m not sure why. It reminded me of some songs I heard at discos in the late 70s - very heavy bass thumping in the background. One can imagine this will be popular played very loud in a small car driven by a youth with a backward facing baseball cap. In addition, as the car drives up the street the driver trying to look cool as the heavy base thumps out, causing the car to lurch forward and back like a demented heartbeat. Even so, I quite liked it, as long as I didn’t have to listen to it played on a car stereo.

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MGMT - Time To Pretend (Columbia)

The opening sequence seemed to have been recorded in a bath with the occupant farting into the mic. The start of the lyrics seemed to be promising until the volume of the synthesiser is just loud enough to drown out all but a few of the words. It would be the sort of music played by that annoying neighbour during one of his dreadful late night parties. This track is ideal for annoying all those who live around you. This works on some level, I am just not sure what that level is.

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Future of the Left - Manchasm (Too Pure)

When this track started, I thought that the player had developed a fault, the one note repeated throughout the sequence only started to become annoying after the first ten seconds. This developed into a crescendo of unintelligible noise masquerading under the guise of lyrics. A row usually heard at the end of long nights clubbing when the management want you all to go home so that they can pack up.

Mad Mac - not a fan of Colin

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The Mountain Goats - San Bernadino (4AD)

By far the most pleasant track of the collection. It does seem that the musicians can in fact play and are not hiding their lack of talent by producing a cacophony of noise. The singer has a voice for karaoke, and the lyrics can be heard, and in keeping with the tune. The type of music to play while enjoying a cup of coffee late at night, just before going to bed.

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Links

See above! I’m going to watch The Shield and try to perfect ‘Manchasm‘ on the stylophone.

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Intro: Ross
Words: Mad Mac

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A Special Mixtape and an Apology

First things first.

Apologies for the lack of updates recently. Currently, Jason is working on changes to the site and has literally been consumed with work (I haven’t seen him in weeks and he seems only able to communicate using carrier pigeons) and me…well…I’ve just been incredibly lazy watching The Shield, eating expensive biscuits and playing Singstar.
-The Cole Train!

As a way of saying sorry and because I thought it would be a good idea I’ve compiled together various pieces of music taken from various computer games that I have played and loved over the years. Some are quite recent, others hark back to the glorious days of 1997 where point and click games were ‘cool’ and running over penguins in a souped-up convertible, with Iron Maiden pounding from the speakers, whilst giving the finger to the BBFC was the most daring thing ever. Anyway…. enjoy!

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Gears of War - Cole Train Rap

I’m not sure of the official title of this, but it has a last.fm page, so it must be correct, right? Anyway, those skillful enough to complete the ‘It looks a bit Games Workshop‘ macho-fest Gears of War, will know doubt have heard the hilarious rap at the end provided by Lester Speight (voice of Augustus Cole.) To say it fits the tone of the game is stating the bleeding obvious, but it does, just as much as the dramatic classical pieces that crop up through the various acts. Plus, the scratching is just brilliant.

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Bullfrog Productions - Aum!

Taken from one of my favourite games of all time, the deliciously evil Dungeon Keeper, ‘Aum!‘ is an ominous riff-driven piece of music that combines elements of old school metal and orchestral wailing. It is featured at the beginning of the game as a kind of trailer. I have nothing else to really add except I’d like to know how to play the ‘der ner, der-ner-ner, der-ner-ner-ner-ner-ner’ riff. Tasty. I always imagine the Horned Reaper (main character) strutting down the corridor, decapitating heroes to this piece of music.

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GLaDOS & Jonathan Coulton - Still Alive

Want to really piss someone off? Then keep singing this at them. It’s another end credits tune sung by the guide/antagonist from Valve’s Portal. The lyrical content references many situations the player experienced throughout the game, such as cake, Aperture Science and even Black Mesa. Despite the physical form of GLaDOS lying in pieces at the end of Portal, she makes reference to still being alive, which is oddly disturbing, especially set to such lo-fi electro-pop.

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Iron Maiden - Be Quick Or Be Dead

Okay, so it’s not official computer game music, but come on…..it’s Iron Maiden! Not only was SCI’s Carmageddon 2 one of the best driving games ever, it also had one hell of a soundtrack comprising of not 1, but 4 Maiden songs on constant rotation. These were interspersed with some trippy drum ‘n bass beats it provided an excellent soundtrack to mowing down deer on the fun fair level. Also, possibly the most aptly named track for a game that involves running people over? Hell yeah.

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Martin O’Donnell & Michael Salvatori - Never Forget

Taken from Halo 3, ‘Never Forget‘ is a very moving and beautiful piece of classical music. It always amazes me how this kind of music can fit so well with a game featuring such strong graphic violence. It certainly acts as a calming effect on the player, whilst fitting in with the somber but harsh tones that are associated with war. There’s something about it that sends a shiver down my spine.

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Epic Games - Go Down

Unreal Tournament fanatics will recognise this piece straight away. Some of you may also be puzzled at the lack of ‘headshot!’ and various weapon noises, which I have come to associate with this piece. Featured quite prominently in the levels ‘Deck 17′ and ‘Morpheus’ it is the polar opposite of Halo 3’s classical schmaltz; opting for a more fast-paced dance beat to get the player’s pulse racing. Boom, baby.

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Stay tuned for a very special ‘Mad Mac reviews’ post, where he gets to grips with various indie-darlings and attempts to rip them to shreds with his own kind of sarcasm and bemusement. It should be a good one.

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Sounds

Due to technical problems, said music files will not be shown in the usual player, but can be streamed instead from this link at muxtape.com. (Just click on the song name and a timer will start and the song should immediately start.)

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By Ross Macdonald

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