Heartsounds

Apologies for the mere one new review yesterday. Life happens, man!

Anyway, back to our regularly scheduled updates. Today's first new review is Brian Shultz's take on the new LP from Courtesy Drop, Songs to Drive To; Cry, and Make Love To:

Songs to Drive To; Cry, and Make Love To is steered by plaintive vocals delivering deathly serious, ideally therapeutic musings, and a deceptively dynamic musical backdrop to carry it all. That means there's lots of self-loathing, of course, whether it be personal crises of complacency ("Dormant Dreams") or imbalanced relationships ("Stranger Than Fiction").

Read Brian's review right here.

Then, Christopher Barrett examines the new offering from Heartsounds, Internal Eyes:

Their third full-length Internal Eyes maintains the overarching EpiFat sound of Until We Surrender and Drifter, but with some new elements added to the table. Internal Eyes is the second album with Trey Derbes as Heartsounds' drummer; he brought a more dynamic, collaborative sound to Drifter and that continues here.

Read Christopher's review right here.

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