Replicas: Pop Will Eat Itself “Dos Dedos Mis Amigos”
We check out the reissue of the Poppies seminal mid-Nineties industrial rock record, and the disk of unreleased material that accompanies it.
Read MoreReturning with their first LP of all new material in 16 years, Die Krupps sound exactly as you would expect them to… in a positive way.
Read MoreBody Music mondays is go, with cuts from Neuroticfish, Blac Kolor, Vomito Negro, Pouppée Fabrikk and Cryo.
Read MoreThe young Filipino producer goes for obscure and mysterious without layering on the darkness in his debut for Phantasma Disques.
Read MoreThe new free-to-download EP from the NYC duo marries their squelchy high-concept techno to a new set of orchestral sounds.
Read MoreThe Swedish post-punk quartet wear their influences loud and proud in a largely successful crossover effort.
Read MoreThe latest from Mark Jackson and Ronan Harris fails to buck the creative inertia that his gripped the project for almost a decade.
Read MoreGoth Christmas season is in full effect with new tunes and remixes from Mr.Kitty, Corvx de Timor, Principe Valiente, Pure Ground and Gatekeeper.
Read MoreThe first album for Hands from the rhythmic electro project is a spookier, more foreboding affair.
Read MoreThe collaboration between the noted techno artist and the industrial godfathers provides new perspectives on both their works.
Read MoreEmpirion’s Oz Morsley transitions his techno-EBM project into a full electro-rock band, with disappointing results.
Read MoreThe second album from Ab Ovo’s Régis Baillet evokes shapes and motions through careful composition and sound design.
Read MorePosted by alex | Oct 1, 2013 | End to End, Reviews | 0
We pick through the new single by the Swedish interstellar EBM project.
Read MoreThe new tape and digital release from brothers Alexander and Andrew Jarson is an unexpectedly great collection of dark synth tunes.
Read MoreA Monday is a hell of a thing, but much less terrible when you have new songs from Alter Der Ruine, Mangadrive, Divider, Body Party and Radical G & The Horrorist.
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