Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Idling in the Basement

 

I recently mentioned to an old friend I reconnected with that, while I LOVE Idles' 2018 album, Joy as an Act of Resistance, I've had a tough time getting into anything since. Not because I don't like what I've heard; I know myself and I call this the "PJ Harvey Syndrome." I adore PJ Harvey, but I fall so hard for an album at a time that it becomes difficult for me to acclimate to any of her other works beyond that album for usually years at a time. It started with about five years of To Bring You My Love, grew to include Stories From the City, Stories From the Sea for about another seven years, then finally let in Uh Huh Her. And that's about where I am with Ms. Harvey - I'm overdue for sure.

Back to Idles, David mentioned I should start with Idles From the Basement concert on YouTube, and I'll be gotdamned if he wasn't exactly right. Thinking this is the album that opens these guys' post-Joy work up for me. I had not realized just how much they'd developed as a band - watching this, it's difficult not to make comparisons to Birthday Party-to-Bad Seeds Cave and crew, especially while watching Guitarist Mark Bowen alternate between a whole slew of different instruments a la Warren Ellis. 

I'll be starting the day off with 2021's Crawler, so here's to the hearty exploration of sound and fury!



NCBD:

Nothing on my pull list at Rick's today, so how about instead I post the latest Drinking with Comics, where Shin and I rattle off our top five list for 2025!


I went straight to the top five comics published this year; Mike did a little something different. When all is said and done, I think there's a lot of great stuff out there, and this is definitely meant to encourage folks who are looking for something new. 




Watch:

K and I finally got around to Luca Guadagnino's latest film, After the Hunt, last night. As usual, this man excels in filmmaking.


The tension is profound. The acting is superb, and while I admit that I've spent most of my life running from post-Flatliners Julia Roberts, she is exceptional here. The film says so much with a bombastic nuance that leaves you breathless by the end, and I actually think it helped me come to a conclusion about our society that, while it's not a good thing, is definitely appreciated as a warning. 



Playlist:

Kate Bush - The Dreaming
White Reaper - Only Slightly Empty
Gylt - I Will Commit a Holy Crime: Tandem
Orville Peck - Appaloosa
Netherlands - Vapors
Slow Crush - Thirst
Teenage Wrist - Chrome Neon Jesus
HEALTH - Conflict DLC
Mondo Decay - Nun Gun
Fever Ray - 
Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds - The First Born Son is Dead
The Cure - Pornography
Blut Aus Nord - Ethereal Horizons
Ethel Cain - Perverts
Ildes - From the Basement




Card:

From Jonathan Grimm's Hand of Doom Tarot, which you can buy HERE.


• XVI: The Tower
• Seven of Cups
• Six of Wands

Do not let massive emotional change poison the creative urge. 

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

My Ten Favorite Albums of 2025

 Well folks, we made it through another year of the post-apocalyptic 20's. This was a rough year - roughest in a while - yet I still remain somewhat even keel in my pessimism. I guess you could say I've just acclimated to the idea of living in a future imperfect. I think my list walks an interesting line between pessimism and a deep, grieving peace I feel when I think about the world I've known and will one day leave behind. 2026 is the dawn of my 50th year here, and who can say how much longer I'll be around? Probably for a while, but sometimes it doesn't feel that way at all. The impermanence of our society soaks through the everyday world and makes it all seem... doomed. But it felt that way last year, and the year before, and the year before, so... you see why I've adopted that post-apocalyptic qualifier for our present era.

And yet, 2025 was another fantastic year for music. I have some returning favorites on the list and some artists who are new to me. Before we get started, though, I want to throw some love and awe at Heaven Is An Incubator's year-end album list. If you want to really break beyond what you think you know about music, visit his list HERE

Okay, here are my ten favorite albums that came out in 2025. I've kept the numbering at bay, but the top three are the top three. 'Nuff said.




Deafheaven - Lonely People With Power


Deafheaven returns and answers the question on everyone's mind for the last few years: "Are they done with the black metal vocals?" We've watched vocalist George Clarke develop and hone his clean vocal technique since Ordinary Corrupt Human Love, and as much as I love Infinite Granite and am here if the band wants to do more albums in that vein, I loved that Deafheaven returned full force on Lonely People With Power. The album is heavy, weird and downright caustic at times, and it couldn't sound better. Way to go, guys!

Buy HERE.
 


Odonis Odonis - Eponymous


I almost missed the fact that Odonis Odonis released a new album in 2025. Since searing their place in my heart with 2016's Post Plague - my #1 of that year - I've been hot and cold with what they've released. This year's eponymous release, however, is fantastic. It took me a minute to figure out why it was that, whenever I listened to this, I tended to follow it with Eagulls eponymous 2014 debut, but once the lightbulb clicked on, it was obvious: Odonis² have sequed from the more industrial elements and dipped both feet in Post Punk, a la Eagulls. The songs on this one are all dour and catchy, as all the best Post Punk is. Love this one. 

Buy HERE.
 

Steve Moore - Jimmy & Stiggs OST


I have bought and cherished every original soundtrack Zombi's Steve Moore has made for Joe Begos since their relationship began on Begos' second feature film, The Mind's Eye. Somehow, though, I don't think I've ever ranked one of those records in my top ten of the year. This is all oversight and a product of how my brain processes information. Soundtracks and scores feel separate from 'albums' when I compose my lists, and that's not fair at all. So I had to put Moore's score to Begos' latest, Jimmy & Stiggs, on my list this year because it's f*cking great! The film itself is insane, and the score anchors the titular characters' descent into madness as they prepare an impossible line of self-defense against the incredible, all while trapped within the familiar. Moore also knows when to swing his own proverbial hammer, and there are some magnificent moments of Herculean bombast contained within this score, which I've used to start my day more times than not since it arrived. 


Buy HERE.

Young Widows - Power Sucker 


Young Widows fell off my radar a bit during the nearly ten-year hiatus that saw vocalist/guitarist Evan Patterson build out his Jaye Jayle project. Now they're back and I live oh so close to them, so I was ecstatic when they not only released a new album this year, but played nearby.  Power Sucker is a fantastic record, and one that helped set the tone for my year. Those big sloppy slabs of sound that often earn the band a hyphenated qualifier "noise-" are in full display, the lyrics are sharp as ever, and by track thirteen's conclusion, I usually feel a bit bludgeoned.

Exactly why I continue to show up. Here's to many more Young Widows albums in the immediate future (hint hint).

Buy HERE.
 

Blackbraid - Blackbraid III


The progression of Blackbraid from I, through II, and now on to III is so clear and exciting. This project just keeps getting better, darker, and more experienced in laying out some of the most intricate compositions in Metal today. Like II, Blackbraid III continues to see Sgah'gahsowáh (aka John Krieger) develop the overall tapestry of his writing and sound. This plays like one large piece of music with multiple movements, and that makes it feel almost cosmic in scope. The Earthy tones temper the razor-sharp black metal with a spirit of communion and renewal, helping Blackbraid transcend the Black Metal milieu, so that I consider them a peer to a band like Blut Aus Nord or Zeal and Ardor more than any of the more conventional bands out there today (not that there's anything wrong with conventional metal of any kind).

Buy HERE.
 

Slow Cruch - Thirst


Nothing about Slow Crush's new album, Thirst, can be accused of reinventing the shoegaze wheel. Doesn't matter. This is an excellently crafted example of the genre, with some surprises thrown in for good measure. There's such a respect for the overall tone of the album as applied to the individual tracks, so that this feels like one long piece of music - always my favorite kind of album. Issa Holliday's vocals split the difference between a kind of dream-induced psychosis and a slightly more aggressive approach to the genre's style, which makes this one stand out. I dig how the album moves and evolves from track to track, and by the end, you just feel a big, epic energy that often invites immediate replay. 

Buy HERE.


Deftones - private music



My 2025 Apple Music 'Wrapped" will tell you Deftones' private music was my favorite album of the year, and it is certainly up there. This was my most-listened to digitally - hell, it was the soundtrack to my summer. I listened to this album more days than not during those warmer months, and that was an experience I hadn't encountered for years. I began my relationship with this one rather tentatively, but very quickly it moved into place as maybe just behind Koi No Yokan as my favorite of their recent albums (White Pony and Saturday Night Wrist are untouchable, mind you). There's love, honor, appreciation and a lot of subtle hooks that really anchor the flow of the record so it feels like another of the band's coherent statements. There's even a moment that makes me wonder if this is the final Deftones album. Let's f*cking hope not, eh? 

Buy HERE.

Blut Aus Nord - Ethereal Horizons


Blut Aus Nord's Ethereal Horizons is a painting. It is a musical movement that pushes aside the veil of the mundane and offers tantalizing glimpses of something beyond human ken. Part sequel to 2018's Hallucinogen, part completely new horizon, this record stands as yet another example of how utterly Vindsval and his collaborators embrace a completely original approach to creating music. This isn't metal, it's art. 

Buy HERE.
 
 
Deadguy - Near-Death Travel Services


I still cannot believe that, after 30 years, I not only got to see Deadguy live last year, but we got a new album from the original line-up back in May! I mean, this is unheard of, even moreso because Near-Death Travel Services is AWESOME! This album pummels you from start to finish, not just with the heaviest riffs and phrasing I heard all year, but with vocalist Tim Singer's blistering lyrics and delivery. 

"It's all a parlor trick
A hollow hand with empty offers
This life we share is a gimmick."*

This isn't one of those long-awaited reunion records that feel like Deadguy never left. Instead, just as the world has escalated over the thirty-years since Fixation on a Co-Worker, Deadguy's own mechanims for processing and traversing the current cultural climate has seen its own brand of escalation; the 'I'll-rip-your-face-off' aesthetic that endeared me to tracks like "Pins and Needles" and "The Extremist" has sequed into the, "I'll-burn-your-fucking-house-down-with-you-inside" response I think a lot of us feel toward the world at large. The trick is to keep that shit under control. One way to do that is to create music like Deadguy. Another is listening to that music. 

"I don't see a happy ending, do you?
I don't see a solution, do you?
I don't think words will save us, do you?"**

This just hits the 2025 nail right on the head, doesn't it?

Buy HERE.


* Cheap Trick
** The Alarmist



Willie Nelson - Oh What A Beautiful Word


It's only over the last few years that Mr. Brown has made me a believer in Rodney Crowell. I believe it was our first Christmas in Tennessee when he sent me a vinyl copy of Crowell's Christmas Everywhere. Soon after, during our back-and-forth vinyl trade-offs, he lent me numerous albums by the man, but it wasn't until his Chicago Sessions record that I really began to get it

Willie Nelson has always held my respect, especially after seeing him live in 2015. The man's a legend, but what I didn't know until that show is, he's also one of the best living guitar players working in popular music today. I'll not pretend to be a die-hard fan, but I have a few records I listen to now and again, and his music has made a pretty deep impact on my life on several occasions. This record being the biggest.

Now, put Crowell and Nelson together on an album where one plays songs by the other, and we have absolute magic. This album is beautiful, heartfelt, heartwrenching, and uplifting in a way few musicians could ever hope to convey. This helped me through the loss of our cat Sweetie, and thus, after spending weeks in my CD player, it slipped off regular rotation. I've been peppering it in again lately, but the nerves are still too raw. That doesn't change the fact that this is by far the best album I heard in 2025. 

Buy HERE.





Finally, a HUGE shout-out to Wake the Devil.

With the singles they've released this year, I have no doubt that once the full album comes out, it will be at the top of my list.

Monday, December 29, 2025

L.A. Witch - I Hunt You Prey


I completely missed L.A. Witch's album DOGGOD, released earlier this year. Another dark, hazy 2:00 AM corridor into desert landscapes and haunted urban derelicts, "I Hunt You Prey" is probably my favorite track (so far) and a great example of what I love about this band.

You can check L.A. Witch out on their Bandcamp HERE.




Watch:

Just a note that my Top Ten Favorite Albums of 2025 is dropping tomorrow. I figured I'd give a heads up since I have moved to a Monday-Wednesday-Friday posting schedule. We're also recording our Top Five Horror for The Horror Vision this week, so that will go up next Monday, January 5th. And because I don't want to just add some adverts here without giving something of substance in the 'now,' let me tell you that my favorite movie of the year - by far - was Ari Aster's Eddington


This one is just a powerhouse, a well-deserved magnifying glass for Western Society that was equally frightening, cringe-inducing and hysterical. Even the first of my two theatrical viewings was my most interesting theatrical experience this year, as my nonstop laughter at how stupid most of the people in the movie are was apparently briefly misconstrued as being at the expense of the concept, "Black Lives Matter." Things stood on the head of a pin in the theatre briefly that night, but eventually the other person recognized that I was actually laughing at how stupid some white people are when faced with questions of race, and they subsequently added their own laughter to augment mine.  




Read:

Mirrors fascinate me. Specifically, the occult connotations, associations and mythology behind them. So it was with little hesitation that I ordered a copy of Hellebore Magazine's issue #14, The Mirror Issue:


This is great because it's both a pleasure read and continued research while I continue hammering away at Shadow Play Book Two, which, if you have read Book One, you know is steeped in Mirror Magick.

Of particular note in this issue are Elizabeth Dearnley's essay on Dark Doubles and Sam George's The Vampire's Lost Reflection, the latter dealing with the "no-shadow" "no-reflection" particulars of Bram Stoker's 1897 Dracula and the eerie similar mechanisms it shares with Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Grey, published 7 years before. 




Playlist:

Jim Williams - Possessor OST
L.A. Witch - Eponymous
Agriculture - The Spiritual Sound
L.A. Witch - DOGGOD
The Dream Syndicate - The Days of Wine and Roses
Dreamkid - Daggers
Arcade Fire - Everything Now
The Fixx - Reach the Beach
Ghost - Impera
Gylt - I Will Commit A Holy Crime: Tandem
Loathe - I Let It in and It Took Everything
Deadguy - Near-Death Travel Services
INXS - Kick
Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings - Give the People What They Want
Isaac Hayes - The Isaac Hayes Movement
The Boys Choir of Vienna - Voices & Bells of Christmas Around the World
Robert Rheims - Merry Christmas in Carols
Phil Collins - Face Value
Ella Fitzgerald - The Best of Ella Fitzgerald Vol. II
Metallica - Kill 'Em All
Keith Jarrett - The Köln Concert 50
Drug Church - Prude




Card:

From Jonathan Grimm's Hand of Doom Tarot, which you can buy HERE.


• XV: The Devil
• Ten of Cups
• XI: Justice

One of the elements Grimm's Devil card gives me in this deck is influence. C'mon - a stoner chick with a vest sewn up with patches? What's that if not influence? The music I love - especially what I love enough to put on a jacket - is one of the major influences of my life. Combine that with the Ten's base of Malkuth - Earth, our primary realm - applied to the emotional pull of Cups I'm picking up a context of working from a strong emotional base (music). XI: Justice - known in the Thoth Deck as Lust - suggests yearning, but also, a nod toward cause and effect. If you call upon it, be prepared for it to answer. Whatever that "it" might be. 

Friday, December 26, 2025

Electric Wizard LIVE!!!


Here's a nice little 666 injection into your Christmas Holiday. Posted by the Kilkim Žaibu festival. Great channel - check 'em out HERE.
 


Watch:

If there's one subgenre based on location I love, it's Horror set in the Irish countryside. Director Peter Vass's upcoming film Banshee looks to have the quiet atmosphere I love in spades. Check out this trailer:


I'm unfamiliar with Vass and everything about this project, but after watching this, oh do I yearn to know more! You can check out the film's socials via the YouTube link. 



Read:

As I approach the finish line on Isabel Cañas's The Possession of Alba Díaz, I realized that my first read of 2025 is probably going to be a long-overdue re-read of William Gibson and Bruce Sterling's classic The Difference Engine


I pulled my old beat-up paperback off the shelf a few nights ago and set it aside in preparation. It's easily been 15 years since the last time I read this one, and I think it will help me nail the Victorian England portion of Shadow Play, Book Two, which I'm hip-dip in at the moment and needing some authenticity. 




Playlist:

Metallica - Kill 'Em All
The Dream Syndicate - The Days of Wine and Roses
The Ocean - Phanerozoic I: Palaeozoic
Allegaeon - Apoptosis
Dreamkid - Daggers
D'Nell - 1st Magic
James Last - Christmas Dancing
Various - I'll Be Home for the Holidays
Bob Rivers - Twisted Christmas
Metallica - Ride the Lightning
Vince Guardaldi - A Charlie Brown Christmas OST
Rodney Crowell - Christmas Everywhere
Bing Crosby - Merry Christmas
Calexico - Second Shift




Card:

From Jonathan Grimm's Hand of Doom Tarot, which you can buy HERE.


• XVII: The Star
• XIX: The Sun
• Seven of Pentacles

Hope, clarity and assessment. That pain turned out to be another example of the bane of my middle age - gas. I'm alright now and ready to turn the volume up on my eating and drinking over the next few days. 

Wednesday, December 24, 2025

I Left My Heart in Sunnyvale


I don't know of another piece of music that fills me with such calm. I think it's because I started really getting into Trailer Park Boys shortly after I moved to L.A. in 2006, and I associate those first five years there as being the last bastion of the world before the post-apocalyptic bullshit started. This isn't political - well, not entirely - everyone's wrong. Everything's broken. This song represents a kind of precipice to me, and although the world has since fallen off, every once in a while I hear this and it slows the fall, reminds me what it was like to have our feet planted on what we thought was solid ground*.


* It was never solid ground and every generation feels this. The current generations, though, are the ones living it.     



NCBD:

Short week this week.


Finally - "The Quintesson War" begins! I've declared my love for these odd techno-organic monstrosities on this page many times, and I'm happy as hell to have a six-issue arc dedicated to them in Void Rivals. Unlike fellow Energon Universe title G.I. Joe's current "Dreadnok War" storyline, VR isn't going bi-weekly for this stretch, and I'm fine with that. Just happy to be getting more Quintesson goodness!


When I downloaded this cover, I noticed right away the "7 of 8" added to the corner box. NO! I thought Zander Cannon's Sleep was going to go on longer than just eight issues! I will miss this book SO MUCH! That said, I can not wait for the revelations we're sure to be getting over the next two issues. I mean, I don't need it all explained and wrapped up, but I'm dying to get at least a glimpse at what it is that Jonathan becomes when he falls asleep. That's really all I ask. 


The penultimate issue of this Event Horizon prequel series. This one isn't quite what I expected or hoped for, but it's definitely building to something. I'm hoping that something is as INSANE as those snippets of these events play in the movie. We'll see. 




Watch:

I had the distinct pleasure of being offered a copy of Kyle Valle and Erin Áine's ZombieCON, Vol. 1 this week. Here's a trailer that just barely scrapes the surface of goodness contained within:


This is a super indie film, but I have to say, they really made everything about it work. This feels like it should have come out ten years ago - NOT a knock - and reminds me so much of Joss Whedon - specifically that Dr. Horrible web-series Whedon did circa 2008. This comes from a place of love with the Convention circuit and the entire culture that goes with it. 



Playlist:

Radiohead - Kid A
Godflesh - A World Lit Only By Fire
Somnium Nox - Apocrypha EP
Somnium Nox - Terra Inanis EP
Black Taffy - Out Moon 
Metallica - Ride the Lightning
Metallica - Kill 'Em All
Odonis Odonis - Eponymous
Ashes and Diamonds - Are Forever
Eagulls - Eponymous
Faetooth - Labryinthine
Deadguy - Near-Death Travel Services
Deftones - private music




Card:

From Jonathan Grimm's Hand of Doom Tarot, which you can buy HERE.


• Three of Swords
• Five of Pentacles
• Seven of Pentacles

Blockage, worry and calamity. 

I had an Al Swearingen moment this morning. I drank a bit more beer than I probably should have last night, fully expecting to wake up in the middle of the night to answer the call of nature. Didn't happen. As a matter of fact, I woke up this morning and didn't feel an aching desire to relieve myself then, either. All day this has haunted me. I drank a ton of coffee, but never really felt like what came out was equal to what went in. That's not normally how my body works. So I see this full, and I'm a skosh concerned. 

Let's put a pin in this one and hope everything comes out okay tomorrow.

Monday, December 22, 2025

Cycle Sluts From Hell - I Wish You Were A Beer

 
Wow! I have not heard this in a very long time! I first heard this via the Operation Rock n' Roll compilation cassette I spoke at length about HERE. The band's 1991 eponymous debut turned out to be their only album, but it's pretty great. I never made it past the two singles back in the day - not for lack of interest, but hey, we didn't have the luxury of streaming back in 1991, hahaha - but I'm listening to it now and it feels a lot like what I'd pretty much always assumed: a bit of a female take on Gwar without the Horror Fantasy theatrics. 



Watch:

I had an impromptu Jeremy Saulnier weekend this past Friday and Saturday. Started Friday with Blue Ruin, which I'd not seen since somewhere around the time it first hit streaming.


This 100% holds up to the fairly lofty place that first viewing gave it in my head. I don't know if I've ever seen a revenge film with such heartfelt emotion. As big as this goes stakes-wise, Blue Ruin always feels grounded in the real world, with real people who do the things I think many of us would do in such a dire situation.

Next up, on Saturday I finally got around to Saulnier's 2024 film Rebel Ridge


This is one I'd rather not post the trailer for. I'd not seen it before viewing, and after watching it just now, I have to say, just go in as blind as possible. Saulnier's not reinventing the wheel here; he never is. The point is, he has such a unique style as a filmmaker who marries Suspense and Action. This one is about as tense as Denis Villeneuve's Prisoners, and that's saying something. Outstanding performances all around, but Aaron Pierre is just magnetic beyond words. 




Read:

I blew through a re-read of Nathan Ballingrud's Crypt of the Moon Spider, the first book in his Lunar Gothic Trilogy on Saturday. I've been meaning to get around to re-reading this and picking up part two since it came out in October. Instead of giving the bezos corporation more money, I drove over to our local independent book store, Clarksville Book Shop, and asked them to order me Cathedral of the Drowned. I can't wait to read this one. 

In the meantime, however, I grabbed this off the store's shelves and am already over 100 pages in:


I knew nothing about this novel or author Isabel Cañas, for that matter, but if there's one predilection I tend to exhibit more or less consistently, it's going in blind. So far I'm pretty deeply immersed. Here's the solicitation blurb:

"When a demonic presence awakens deep in a Mexican silver mine, the young woman it seizes must turn to the one man she shouldn’t trust… from bestselling author Isabel Cañas. In 1765, plague sweeps through Zacatecas. Alba flees with her wealthy merchant parents and fiancé, Carlos, to his family’s isolated mine for refuge. But safety proves fleeting as other dangers soon bare their teeth: Alba begins suffering from strange hallucinations, sleepwalking, and violent convulsions. She senses something cold lurking beneath her skin. Something angry. Something wrong. Elías, haunted by a troubled past, came to the New World to make his fortune and escape his family’s legacy of greed. Alba, as his cousin’s betrothed, is none of his business. Which is of course why he can’t help but notice her every time she enters a room or the growing tension between them… and why he notices her deteriorate when the demon’s thirst for blood grows stronger."




Playlist:

Carter Burwell - Blood Simple OST
Vitriol - Eponymous
Jim Williams - Woodlands Dark and Days Bewitched OST
Testament - Para Bellum
The Atlas Moth - Coma Noir
Dance with the Dead - Driven to Madness
Meg Myers - Sorry
Perturbator - Age of Aquarius
John Coltrane - Blue Train
Odonis Odonis - Eponymous
Coleman Hawkins - Wrapped Tight
Cycle Sluts From Hell - Eponymous
Archspire - Carrion Ladder (single)
The Ocean - Fluxion
Oxcar Peterson, Joe Pass & Ray Brown - The Giants




Card:

From Jonathan Grimm's Hand of Doom Tarot, which you can buy HERE.


• Queen of Cups
• Knight of Cups
• Two of Pentacles

Pursuit of artistic endeavors can only be upheld with compassion for the world around you and the adaptability that requires. Because, in 2025, compassion can be a difficult thing. Maybe not for those in your immediate circumference, but definitely for the world at large. 

This is a fairly banal, vague reading, but there's something here. While I'm typing this, the Ocean's refrain, "Tonight we celebrate the human stain" echoes through my ears and makes me wonder if there might be a way to use art to connect to someone who I don't see eye to eye with. You can ask what's the point, but at the same time, partisanship and cynicism have all but bankrupted our culture and society. While art remains pure. Is there a way to use that purity to reach beyond our broken means of communication?