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“I’m freaking out!” Linkin Park’s new album From Zero hits Number One in the UK charts
See Mike Shinoda and Emily Armstrong accepting their trophy from the Official Charts to celebrate Linkin Park’s new album From Zero hitting Number One.
Exclusive: Every song on the new album by stoner-goth trio Brume will make you ache for more.
Brume's songs are solid reminders that goth and doom aren't always so far apart. Much of the San Francisco three-piece's music is adorned with the dressings of the former genre -- piano, melancholy violins, and frontwoman Susie McMullan's haunting vocals throughout. But all of this is framed by the down-paced footfalls and groaning sweeps of the latter, making their sound feel more organic than goth's more synthetic undertones. The result is sacramental, a spiritual breed of downer rock where vaulted emotion meets hands-on execution.
The band's latest, Rabbits, hoists this torch high; it's a funeral doom album that goes especially old-school on the funeral part. The overall vibe of this record makes one think of hardwood floors, failing crops, kneaded old hands. McMullan's lilting vocal melodies are folkish but grim; as though they might've been sung a hundred years ago by a strange village elder. Drummer Jordan Perkins-Lewis keeps a slow yet thunderous beat, with every snare and bass hit counting as it echoes through the record's dusty, abandoned chamber. From the shimmering gospel of Despondence to the dirt-black ballad of Autocrat's Fool, Brume have made an album that's difficult to turn off or away from.
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“Brume’s music is a time-stamped truth," says the band of their latest offering. "Rabbits reflects how we processed a pretty tough year of tragedy and deception.”
Listen to our exclusive stream of Brume's Rabbit's below:
Brume's Rabbits is out tomorrow, November 22, on Magnetic Eye Records, and is available for preorder.
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