Wednesday ā Mowing the Leaves Instead of Piling āem Up
5.3.22 by Matty McPherson

Wednesday ā Mowing the Leaves Instead of Piling āem Up
5.3.22 by Matty McPherson
5.3.22 by Matty McPherson

The cover art of Wednesdayās 2021 LP, Twin Plagues, featured the strongest āhow you gonna go big on big?ā energy Iāve seen out of an indie āreverb-guitarā based release in a moment. Zen Arcade was being evoked but it was with a blunt stare back towards the listener. Times have changed, contexts have unfurled and been reshaped. The albumās dozen tracks emanating a strange currency between Seamās majestic & sniffly slowcore hardcore and country style songwriting with hella feedback. Pinning it all down was second to just the natural chemistry. Twin Plagues was a grip. Any shock release was to be of interest.
Thus it is with a light heart that I can attest Wednesdayās Mowing the Leaves Instead of Piling āem Up is exactly that kind of shock listening material we needed. Perhaps you saw the Aquarium Drunkard Lagniappe Session where three of these were presented. The tapeās got nine covers, ranging from Roger Miller and the Drive By-Truckers to Vic Chestnutt and Medicine cover an intense amount of influences that *insist* yes, these folks are gonna go so big on big theyāll hit you with a diamond sledgehammer.
Side A is the designated country side, and has quickly racked itself up as my new drinking buddy at the county taprooms. Exactly what musters me to expend this level of camaraderie is how the five piece take these country tunes and mangle them through quietLOUDquiet twisted noise bouts to come out with a particular refraction. These bouts of noise are not entirely lo-fi frizzles or countrified bangers on a primary level anymore per se. Everything about the ace reimaginingsāfrom Sheās Actin Single to the duet of I Am the Cosmosāare evocative catharsis. They transcend them to capital-B Bar Rock standards. As such, I found myself in the rare, yet pleasant realization of a band realizing a song as their own which perhaps is enshrined with Women Without Whiskey, a Drive By Truckers cover that really makes you go āFUCK! Another round asap!ā Writ large, Mowing the Leaves Side A is that kind of moment to the point the band untethered these standards from their respective time and place into their feeling and sound of this moment. What it old is new again.
No act right now is edging for the bar rock crowd quite as hard, but also no act is looking at the indie playbook and stumping with such curiosity on Side B. Itās a more lowkey, humble side to the shock and awe of the former. Yet, the covers are equally worth savoring. The Had 2 Try cover of Hotline TNT is an act of real āgame recognize game,ā just unvarnished appreciation for the under-the-radar actās own homespun shoegaze aesthetic approach. Greg Sage is summoned and reimagined with greater āin-the-redā crunch on āSacrifice (For Love).ā The aforementioned Vic Chestnuttās Rabbit Box becomes a basement jam emanating the energy of a lowkey winter warmer. Finally, the one-two knockout of Medicine and Smashing Pumpkins revel in reminding the home listener that Wednesday know their noise + pop dynamics. Time Machine II has a playful, almost twee sense imbued in it under the quintetās lead, while Perfect redeems classic snot nose Billy and weaves it into a communal tumble, as karly and jake lenderman duet over each other.
Itās likely that Wednesday is currently or about to play in a market near you, headlining a bar-stomper of a show or opening for a slightly larger indie guitar pop band. You might as well catch āem and see if this is at the merch table, as itās sold out and no oneās given a fair shake as to if more tapes are coming. Hereās to a hope they do so.
4.27.22 by Matty McPherson
4.27.22 by Jacob DeRaadt

Top Down from Frank Baugh’s Night Sky Body project is the second in the Synapse Series for Nailbat Tapes, a label that I didnāt think would release this kind of acerbic, atonal, electro-no-wave-post-punk-guitar-and-synth-driven project. One that was completely unknown to me at this point.
Side A of Top Down has several songs veering into the tape cut up/drone/abstract guitar zone, what could pass for modular sounding stuff in parts, then completely dives into a shoe gazing area with twittering synths awkwardly on top of echoing percussions.
Some of the noise is āin tuneā with synths or guitar, sometimes not. The spoken vocals are quite effective with the editing and processing creating what could be pop version(?) ofĀ Alvin Lucier playing with This Heat or early Cabaret Voltaire.Ā None of it feels like a hipster hack job to these ears. Iām always game for this sound when itās done with experimentation and hooks in the same songs. I found thereās passages that extend from a live band feel into some sort of edited music concrete experiment on parts of this tape that really worked for me.Ā
Side B’s opener, āTop Down,ā has a great guitar riff that drives a dirty chord dirge into swirling disaster and irradiances of guitar drone… great shit right here.Ā We arrive on the other side with āTap,ā a patient and paranoid,Ā Motorik rhythm affair that sort of drifts for a bit of time, and returns like an errant shampoo commercial.Ā The computer spits out random bits of information and thatās what we get while the results of the bipodal morphed quadruped reptilian elections are beaming back from the mother ship. The TV receptor is a bit on the fritz and has fits of static pulsations, which display across all of the screens in the store display at the Wal-Mart.Ā These sounds are what you get at the end of side B rather than the band you hear on the first side.Ā A winner for the weirdos.