Categories
Playlists

Summer: Sunny or Blue

Sunscreen, cicadas, tan lines, and watermelon slices. 

Summer at a quick glance is supposed to be a wonderful time filled with laughter and fun.  School is out for most and this is the time when we go home to our hometowns and spend time with our old friends and family.  Some of us get jobs too and some of us keep pushing through classes.

I know the standard is for everyone to be excited about summer and be happy and enjoy it, but not everyone does.  Some people hate the heat and how it makes them feel.  Some people don’t get to have fun in the sun and have to focus on their professional or academic careers.  Some people don’t have anyone to share their summer with and end up being alone wherever they might be.

I am personally not a big fan of summer.  I find that it is way too hot and humid for my liking.  Despite this, there can be some lovely temperate sunny days that I enjoy very much and yearn for in the colder months.

I use music like a soundtrack to my life and therefore, I have certain vibes I like out of different types of days.  I will give a few examples and a couple playlists for I will listen to this summer, whether I find the day a pleasant 72° and sunny or a balmy and sticky 90°.

Sunny Summer

This playlist is full of more indie rock and pop style songs with low distortion, almost beachy vibes.  I include a lot of high energy and relatively happy songs, both in lyrics and in musicality. Some songs contain explicit language or content, please me aware.

A good amount of the songs in this playlist are some of my current favorites.  I have included “Make You Make Believe” by My Kid Brother, which has a very catchy and “dance when no one’s watching” feel to it.  I also made a point to include “Hocus Pocus” by Focus.  This song is a rollercoaster of different styles and is six minutes and forty-two seconds worth of whimsy.  I know most of you might recognize the song from the movie “Baby Driver” but it is so much more than just the background of a high-speed car chase.

Blue Summer

For this playlist, I included some songs that still feel like summer but have more of a melancholic or angsty vibe to them.  These songs tend to either have distortion and high energy, creating a bit of edge, or are slow with some reverb, creating a more sad vibe. Again, some songs contain explicit language or content, please me aware.

For sound with more angst, “Sober” by Public Theater or “Bleach” by Dexter and The Moonrocks would be good choices.  They start very differently, one starting with distortion and high energy and one starting more cleanly and quieter, but ultimately they both will scratch just the right part of the brain.

For sound with more sadness or even just general lower energy, “Social Climb” by I DONT KNOW HOW BUT THEY FOUND ME is a good choice.  This song has some interesting instrumental and vocal combinations that just give it a unique feeling.  Another good choice would be “One Last Time” by Summer Salt.  I would have to say that this song makes me feel like I’m eating watermelon alone on a dock at sunset.  It’s slow and chill and just makes you want to sit alone with your thoughts and sway.

Whether you’re feeling happy or sad about it being summer, just remember that there is always a song that will match your mood and maybe make you feel better.

— dj dragonfly

Categories
Band/Artist Profile

Caroline Rose didn’t choose the “slug life”…

Caroline Rose performing in the Lincoln Theatre in Raleigh, NC, 2015, by Colakovicsrdjan CC SA-4.0

…the Slug Life chose Caroline Rose. Through their, sluggish persona, today’s Caroline Rose understands what folk music is. In an unexpected move, the genre-bending artist leaked their newest album last month several days before release. This, alongside a series of tour dates in “independent, intimate venues” and a release strategy that avoids traditional streaming, Rose hopes to put their music in the hands of fans first. 

Beginning their career with a series of twangy Americana albums, eventually pivoting towards a surfy pop-rock sound towards the end of the 2010s, it came as a surprise when they released 2023’s The Art of Forgetting, a contemplative folk-rock album which combined aching strings with theatrical production. Now, a lengthy international tour and a short film release later, Rose has decided to scale things down in their Year of the Slug.

Continuing in the more acoustic vein of the last album with a far less expansive production, the album they originally “weren’t gonna put out” creates an intimate experience with the listener by combining simple atmosphere with Rose’s characteristically perceptive lyricism. The album centering little more than the singer, their guitar, and whatever background noise can be heard in the recording lets listeners into a sincere listening experience. 

Cover for Year of the Slug by Caroline Rose

Several days before the album’s release on February 7, the artist leaked the album to those on their mailing list. The album’s release as a whole was unconventional, as they hoped to avoid commercial streaming altogether by releasing Year of the Slug on only Bandcamp. As mainstream streaming services have remained controversial for years due to how artists are paid for their work, Rose hopes that a Bandcamp and physical media strategy can allow listeners to have more ownership over the music they’re hearing, and allow for more fair compensation in the process. 

Rose recently set out on tour to promote the album with no band and a list of “independent, intimate venues” to perform at. By performing in spaces like these, avoiding “service fees” in the ticket model, and centering the relationship between fan and artist in these venues, Rose hopes to set themself outside of the touring mainstream and create an experience where the people in the venue are most supported. As they stated in an Instagram post from January, the tour is “an experiment to see what happens when [they] skirt around [a] system that does not serve me or the people buying tickets to my shows. not to mention, it’s simply more fun for me.”

Caroline Rose’s approach to releasing music is radical. They have shown their willingness to put the listener-artist relationship first and have turned away from widespread commercialism in music. While many artists pick up guitars and play folk music, Rose’s approach embodies the intimate, independent spirit that has defined the genre. 

— slacker

Categories
Non-Music News

Camp, horror and DIY

Horror’s linkage to experimentation is bonded through the bending of expectations and possibilities, fear of the unknown underpinning both of these ideas .

Community collaboration and vision execution lends well to playing with aesthetics and genre bleeding, such is the case with Opal 99, a local film production working in the ecosystem of vision creation and execution.

Texture of Production

The limitations of budget, time, and tools become the site of innovation and play.

The choice to film on a miniDV tape was a loop between the aesthetic and thematic as well as accessibility and resource availability.

“A low-quality camera helps blood effects look good” says Grayce Anne Mosier, founder of Opal99, referencing traditions of practical effects and the disguises of imperfect DIY makeup and props.

Horror alchemy, behind the grain, the pixels blur and the vision of chaos runs through, “it leaves more to the imagination when you cant see every pixel in HD” says Carter Bentley Hall.

“If you shoot in 4K, you see every mistake in the prosthetics. But with DV tape, it’s fuzzy enough to sell it.” The rough edges of practical effects become part of the aesthetic, enhancing the gore while contributing to the campy charm.

Furthermore, memories of found footage ruminate in the medium, the idea of lost and found, the illusion of secrecy in a world where this could happen, “It makes you feel like you’re watching something you’re not supposed to be, that’s how I feel about Video Violence“.

“A broken road mic, a $15 mic from the thrift store and a donated mic… and sometimes those items dont even work, so we have to go in ‘post’ to recreate every single sound,” Mosier describes scrappy set ups and making do.

From the fake blood to the party scenes, the filmmaking process is deeply improvised, not just in execution but in spirit. “We told everyone to come over and that we’d have a keg and to write your name down on the sheet and you’d get credit… everyone awkwardly scuttled about and hung out with no music.” No extras, no closed sets—just a real, keg-fueled party filmed and turned into something else.

But in that fusion of real-life messiness and constructed narrative, camp is born. The filmmakers embraced happy accidents—like an actor awkwardly pausing too long on set—as moments of magic. “We could have fixed it, but we chose not to… It was funnier to have him stand there in silence then turn around and leave… and we scored it to that beat, like comedic timing.”

The soundtrack worked in tandem with these visuals to create rhythm, suspense, and a heavy sense of irony. “We built the score to match the awkward moments”

In both sound and gore, the team treated horror like a kind of punk theater: make it loud, make it messy, and make it matter.

Much of what gives these DIY projects their heart is the tension between rehearsed performance and accidental authenticity. Many of the filmmakers come from a theater background, and they see horror filmmaking as a kind of trust fall. “Film is the same kind of bravery for an actor [as theater], except it’s just a little more forgiving of what the end performance will be.” Yet there’s still a crowd watching, still stakes, and still the moment where someone has to scream, grunt, or flail—badly—until it works.

“camp as a love of the unnatural: of artifice and exaggeration” Susan Sontag

Tactile Horror

Oozing charm and cleverness, the creativity in the creation of their diy projects inevitably references sustainable, grassroots practices and a ‘can do’ spirit.

DIY horror cinema thrives at the intersection of the grotesque and the theatrical, where prosthetics become emblems of excess. These hand-crafted effects are not hidden—they’re celebrated, smeared across the screen with glee.

As Susan Sontag writes in Notes on “Camp”, “Camp is a mode of aestheticism…one way of seeing the world as an aesthetic phenomenon.” The fake intestines, dripping latex wounds, and rubber limbs in DIY horror aren’t trying to be invisible—they’re highlighted, pushed to the edge of believability in a way that produces both revulsion and joy.

This aligns with Linda Williams’ theory of “body genres,” where horror, pornography, and melodrama all push the body into extreme states of sensation and response. In DIY horror, prosthetics are physical sites of those extremes—not just mimicking violence but theatricalizing it.

The limitations of budget—cheap prosthetics, ketchup blood, stiff latex—become creative advantages. These “failures” to imitate reality are precisely what give DIY horror its camp energy.

A pool noodle, gelatin, and glycerin walk into the studio and come out a leg on film.

The prosthetic effect—created from a Styrofoam wig stand, a wig, and pasta packed into a log—embodied a grotesque creativity: “We packed all of like the meat over the log… and then we just shoved it through a couple times and hoped no children would pass by.”

This resourceful absurdity exemplifies Sontag’s definition of camp as “a sensibility of failed seriousness,” where theatricality and exaggeration are elevated to aesthetic virtues. As Grayce Anne Mosier puts it, “It’s not supposed to look real—it’s supposed to look cool.”

Bakhtin’s theory of the carnivalesque is deeply relevant here. The grotesque body—open, leaking, unfinished—is central to this horror practice. DIY prosthetics exaggerate bodily rupture in a way that’s comic, communal, and revolting all at once. As Bakhtin writes, the grotesque is about “a body in the act of becoming.” These bodies don’t die cleanly—they split open, bubble over, and resist closure.

The community around these effects—the DIY horror crew huddled around a blood rig—is just as important. Prosthetics aren’t just props; they’re a shared performance, a tactile craft that brings together horror fans, artists, and experimenters in a collaborative, campy ritual.

Horror isn’t just about jump scares and eliciting a response, its about trust, freedom and a commitment of scaring yourself in the dark, making something out of nothing.

Categories
Concert Review

Concert Review: Metallica “M72” World Tour in Blacksburg, Virginia

A while ago, I found out I would have the chance to see Metallica live. I know I’m not the only one who feels that seeing Metallica live is on the bucket list. One of my closest friends’ mom works for the ticket office at Lane Stadium at Virginia Tech. She was able to score some tickets for me and some friends.Obviously, first impressions were along the lines of “OMG I’m actually going to see them.”

Upon arriving, we sat in semi-nosebleed seats and Pantera played as openers.  About two songs into Metallica’s set, my friend’s mom informs us to come to section 110 because she was able to acquire fourth row seats for all of us.  We hustled down and lo and behold there we were in the fourth row.  We were close enough not only to actually see the performers but to even see their facial expressions.  

They opened with “Creeping Death,” most known for the iconic bridge and live background vocals in 1988 or so by Jason Newsted.  While they did not include “die motherf—er die” in the performance, I still think it was a great choice to open with.

The next song they played was one of my personal favorites, “For Whom the Bell Tolls,” from my all-time favorite album, “Ride the Lightning.” I cannot begin to describe my excitement upon hearing this song live.

“Ride the Lightning” album cover
Album cover for “Ride the Lightning” by Metallica

Halfway through the show, they played a couple songs from the new “72 Seasons” album. As good as they were, I was sadly unfamiliar with them. Following those, Robert Trujillo and Kirk Hammett performed a small jam.

They introduced the song as a jam from the previous night and that they were nervous to perform it. They proceeded to play a lively metal piece with BPM changes and such. If they decide to make anything out of it, I look forward to hearing it

The band performed a haunting rendition of “Nothing Else Matters” that blew me away. This song is on I like to play and the solo is one of my personal favorites. It is one I tend to play when just messing around on my guitar. It was moving to hear live, as was “One.”

After a false exit, the band played “Enter Sandman.” Virginia Tech is famous for using the song as an entrance for their football team. During this performance, 60,000 excited fans in the stadium created so much commotion and excitement that, using the Richter scale, a 1.5 magnitude tremor was measured according to Sports Illustrated.

— dj dragonfly

Categories
Weekly Charts

Chainsaw Charts 5/13/25

ArtistRecordLabel
1DEAFHEAVENLonely People With PowerRoadrunner
2THOUUmbilicalSacred Bones
3SIDEREANSpilling the Astral ChaliceEdged Circle
4COFFIN CURSEThe Continuous NothingMemento Mori
5DEFEATED SANITYChronicles of LunacySeason of Mist
6DEMON BITCHMaster of the GamesCruz del Sur
7HIGH ON FIRECometh The StormMNRK
8MITOCHONDRIONVitriseptomeProfound Lore
9CANUT DE BONno esperan por nadieSello Cototo
10BLOOD INCANTATIONAbsolute ElsewhereCentury Media
Categories
Classic Album Review

Classic Album Review: Mitsumeru

Album cover for Gaze by Mitsumeru

Gaze was a Canadian indie pop band with shoegaze and twee leanings. Their drummer, Rose Melberg, was part of a number of other musical groups within the genre such as The Softies and Tiger Trap. The band only released two albums before disbanding but I think that both are worth a listen. While often criticized for lack of musical variety between songs, each song feels emotionally sincere. They may not be the most musically complex band, but their frank lyrics describing everyday frustrations and arguments endear them to me. A friend of a friend you can’t stand, a break up that leaves you bitter and an argument where insults are thrown back and forth are all stories explored within the album “Mitsumeru”. 

One of my favorite songs off of the album is “Any Way”. The opening is a great example of what I mean when I describe the lyrics as frank and honest: 

You are a loser 
You are a jerk
You’re completely insensitive 
And it would never work

Any Way by Gaze

It’s a classic situation where the singer is trying to talk some sense into herself over a guy she knows is not even that cool. The ages of the band’s members show in the kinds of conflicts that they describe. The fact that it feels so real, especially for people at the college age injunction in their lives, makes it so much better to listen to.  

“Mitsumeru” is a fun album with distorted and hastily strummed guitars, bass lines that tell you when to be angry and singing that almost feels spoken at times. If you are a fan of shoegaze and indie pop, Gaze’s album “Mitsumeru” is a classic example of the genre.

Categories
Weekly Charts

Afterhours Charts 5/13/25

Afterhours Charts

ArtistRecordLabel
1MAGITECHRootkit VulturesGimmedanger
2MOUSETRAPPINGI’VE ALWAYS HATED THE INTERNETSelf-Released
3SHENEVERHEXDMEBACKLight_leavingmybody [EP]Vapor Scape
4GWENNYLOLBlurry SkyVapor Scape
5S4DUNICORNsystem//selene [EP]Vapor Scape
6HARMFUL LOGICSOULGEMCOLLECTION (Deluxe)MAD BREAKS
7FULL BODY 2infinity signature [EP]Year0001
8TAPEWORMS Grand VoyageMusic_Website
9DJ BEETLEBITCHAcidtape2024 [EP]Dirtbag
10OUT THE BLUEAcid Fog [EP]Self-Released

Afterhours Adds

ArtistRecordLabel
1SHENEVERHEXDMEBACKLight_leavingmybody [EP]Vapor Scape
2GWENNYLOLBlurry SkyVapor Scape
3S4DUNICORNsystem//selene [EP]Vapor Scape
4HARMFUL LOGICSOULGEMCOLLECTION (Deluxe)MAD BREAKS
Categories
Weekly Charts

Underground Charts 5/13/25

Underground Charts

ArtistRecordLabel
1DUCKWRTHAll American F*ckboyThem Hellas
2AJ TRACEY“Crush” feat. Jorja Smith [Single]Revenge
39LIVES“UP FREESTYLE” feat. Odetari [Single]Pulse/Concord
4EDDIE CHACONLay LowStones Throw
5FLY ANAKIN(The) Forever DreamLex
6JACOB BANKSYonder: Book INobody
7KUNA MAZELayersTru Thoughts
8MICHIDirty TalkStones Throw
9SAM AKPROEvenfallAnti-
10JESHIAirbag Woke Me UpBecause
Because

Underground Adds

ArtistRecordLabel
1MXNXSTXR AND DESTRUCTO“What You Need” feat. Thundercat & Channel Tres [Single]All My Friends
2LORD SKOPIFFStimulated
3SILAS SHORTLUSHLANDStones Throw
4TRYTRYSpectrophonic Sound
5BUTCHER BROWNLetters From The AtlanticConcord Jazz
6LUKE TITUSFrom What Was Will Grow A FlowerSooper
7BOLDY JAMES AND REAL BAD MANConversation PiecesReal Bad Man
8FLY ANAKIN(The) Forever DreamLex
9AJ TRACEY“Friday Prayer” feat. Headie One & Aitch [Single]Revenge
10MCKINLEY DIXON“Could’ve Been Different” [Single]City Slang
Categories
Weekly Charts

Jazz Charts 5/13/25

Jazz Charts

ArtistRecordLabel
1BRANFORD MARSALIS QUARTETBelongingBlue Note
2RACHEL THERRIENMi Hogar IILulaworld
3MAVIS PANRisingSelf-Released
4CLARK TERRY QUARTETIn Orbit (Reissue)Craft / Concord
5FIEVEL IS GLAUQUERong WeicknesFat Possum
6IMMANUEL WILKINSBlues BloodBlue Note
7TAKUYA KURODAEverydayPPK
8RICHARD BARATTALooking BackSavant
9NALA SINEPHROEndlessnessWarp
10NANAMI HARUTAThe VibeOrigin

Jazz Adds

ArtistRecordLabel
1SILVANO MONASTERIOSThe RiverSelf-Released
2IGMAR THOMAS’ REVIVE BIG BANDLike A Tree It GrowsSoulspazam
3SHAREL CASSITYGratitudeSunnyside
4SEAN NELSON NEW LONDON BIG BANDDon’t Stop NowAll In
5SHELLEY YOELIN, SAM ROBINSON, GABRIEL DATCU, RICK SHANDLINGRojoSelf-Released
Categories
Weekly Charts

Top Charts 5/13/25

Top Charts

ArtistRecordLabel
1CASINO HEARTSA Walk In The Grass [EP]Self-Released
2FOXWARREN“Listen2me” [Single]Anti-
3MAE MARTINI’m A TVCasablanca/Republic
4MEI SEMONESAnimaruBayonet
5PINK MUSTPink Must15 love
6SAMANTHA CRAINGumshoeReal Kind
7SCOWLAre We All AngelsDead Oceans
8SUNBATHEMyself To YouTime Release
9APRIL MARCH“Surfing Castafiore” [Single]Bong Load
10DAISY THE GREAT“Ballerina” [Single]S-Curve
11FEEBLE LITTLE HORSE“This Is Real” [Single]Saddle Creek
12GLARESunset FuneralDeathwish
13GREAT GRANDPAPatience, MoonbeamRun For Cover
14GREERBig SmileEpitaph
15JADE THE MOON“Dirty John Type” [Single]Self-Released
16JAPANESE BREAKFASTFor Melancholy Brunettes (& sad women)Dead Oceans
17LAEL NEALEAltogether StrangerSub Pop
18PANCHIKOGinkgoNettwerk
19PICTORIA VARKNothing SticksGet Better
20SBTRKT“Turn Your Heart Around” [Single]Save Yourself
21KICKBACK, THEHit PieceBig Lie
22WETTwo Lives30SF
23ADRIAN QUESADA“Ojos Secos” feat. Cuco [Single]ATO
24ALEXANDRA SAVIOR“Unforgivable” [Single]RCA
25ALLIE KENNY“Soft Crash” [Single]Self-Released
26ART D’ECCOSerene DemonPaper Bag
27BLOOD INCANTATIONAbsolute ElsewhereCentury Media
28BYE2My Wife Is Drink PaintKitty On Fire
29CANUT DE BONno esperan por nadieSello Cototo
30CARLITASentimentalCounter

Top Adds

ArtistRecordLabel
1PHOEBE RINGS“Fading Star” [Single]Carpark
2FULL BODY 2infinity signature [EP]Year0001
3FULL BODY 22020initialsequence2022Year0001
4THE VON TRAPPS“Go With Me” [Single]Self-Released
5WISHYPlanet Popstar [EP]Winspear
6ARCY DRIVEThe PitAWAL
7BLACK POLISH“Be With You” [Single]BMG
8MONTCLAIRHeart Is Alive!NBD
9FELICITYYou Take Me To Dinner But You’ll Never Feed My Soul [EP]Self-Released