Dying Scene Album Review: Mundane – “Ultra Sound”

Gothenburg, Sweden’s Mundane formed as a side project in 2018 and eventually became the main focus of members Hannes Wijk, Felix Grennard, Linus Bech, and Melker Lilja. While releasing songs here and there since that time, this full-length debut is the fruits of their labor. Melding their influences of bands like Weezer and the Pixies […]

Gothenburg, Sweden’s Mundane formed as a side project in 2018 and eventually became the main focus of members Hannes Wijk, Felix Grennard, Linus Bech, and Melker Lilja. While releasing songs here and there since that time, this full-length debut is the fruits of their labor. Melding their influences of bands like Weezer and the Pixies with Midwest emo, Mundane brings us Ultra Sound. A twenty-seven-minute record that will have you head-bopping one minute and getting lost in its meditative songs the next. 

Ultra Sound kicks off with “Riff Raff,” a song about the waxing and waning of drinking excessively and its effects on those around you. It’s not the car is in the front yard of Lit’s “My Own Worse Enemy”; it is closer to ruining the relationships you may have by running your mouth a little too much. The lyrically self-deprecating “Fast but Lazy” keeps your head bopping, but ups the ante on the tempo before stabilizing with “Never Change.” While these first two tracks are great, “Never Change” is where Ultra Sound finds its direction by transitioning into a 1990s emo album with traces of Mineral, Built to Spill, and early Further Seems Forever on the tracks going forward. The second guitar is complementary, with its repeating riffs, and mostly does more than just double up the rhythm guitar. “Summer Day” laments waking up alone after a breakup and is a good halfway point for this record. “Had to Be Good” picks up the back end of this record. “Our Bodies Differ” and “Lately” continues our journey into the emo filtered through Mundane. Ultra Sound closes with the track “The Great Indoors,” a song about letting anxiety and depression win this round and staying in bed all day. 

Ultra Sound basks in the loneliness, isolation, and longing of being young. Despite being at an age where I know these feelings will pass, these sentiments still hit. Are these feelings nostalgic or residual? The answer probably differs day to day. In a year that saw the release from Suburban Eyes, veterans of the genre create new sounds of their pasts, Mundane is filtering their own future on those bands’ sound. There would be no reason to not stock this album next to some of the classics. Ultra Sound is a great album to put headphones on and get lost into. The songs aren’t dragged out, which is sometimes my criticism of 1990s emo and the bands that try to emulate it. Mundane has this locked in perfectly. 

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DS Book Club: Chris MacDonald’s “Days And Days – A Story About Sunderland’s Leatherface And The Ties That Bind”

I have a confession to make. Despite being in the age bracket that I think people refer to as “of a certain age” – read as: closer to 50 than 40; closer to 60 than 20 – I kinda missed Leatherface the first time around (1988 – 1993). In fact, I’m reasonably certain that I […]

I have a confession to make.

Despite being in the age bracket that I think people refer to as “of a certain age” – read as: closer to 50 than 40; closer to 60 than 20 – I kinda missed Leatherface the first time around (1988 – 1993). In fact, I’m reasonably certain that I not only “discovered” Leatherface sometime after I started writing for Dying Scene in 2011, which was not long before they disbanded A) a second time and B) for good. And if I’m being COMPLETELY honest, I’m also relatively sure that I first dipped my toe in the venerable waters after first diving into Frankie Stubbs catalog after getting to write a handful of stories about his Little Rocket Records releases and tour plans and all that. It was then and only then that I learned that this band that I knew was held in such high regard by bands whom I held in such high regard – bands like Hot Water Music and Samiam and Gaslight Anthem – was held in such regard for a reason. The band hits like a sledgehammer. They’re also a classic case of “why wasn’t this band intergalactically massive?” except that in hindsight, they were probably too “alternative” for mainstream punk and too punk rock for mainstream alternative and Frankie’s heartfelt lyrics and gruff, vaguely Lemmy Kilmister-esque vocals probably were just a little too unique to propel the band into the stratosphere they rightly belonged in, meaning they were destined to be a linchpin band in the scene. As MacDonald points out, “Leatherface is a band that was destined for something greater than their cult status.”

But wait, this isn’t a review of Leatherface, the band. Instead it’s a review of Chris MacDonald’s wonderful and unique and new and probably long-overdue book Days And Days: A Story About Sunderland’s Leatherface And The Ties That Bind. The Ontario-based punk rocker and tattoo artist takes a compelling approach to chronicling the life and times of your favorite band’s favorite band. It would have been well within his right to start at the beginning and tell the respective stories of Stubbs and Hammond and Crighton and Lainey and The Eagle and Philliskirk and Burdon and the remainder of the crew that filled out the respective lineups and how they cut their respective teeth in Sunderland and beyond and that would have been wonderful. It would have been equally within his right to compile a series of stories from the likes of the Hot Water Musics and the D4s and Samiams and the laundry list of artists whom the Sunderland legends have influenced in myriad ways over the decades. In fact, MacDonald does a commendable job of doing both of those things simultaneously.

What sets Days And Days apart from your traditional band biography book, however, is the personal context that MacDonald adds to the story. Woven throughout the stories about the band’s history and influence are stories of MacDonald’s own history, particularly the mid-to-late 90s, which was a time period that saw the band itself initially split up and reunite half a decade later after Crighton’s death. Like many of us who are “of a certain age” and had punk rock delivered unto in the early 1990s, MacDonald fell fast and hard and the music matched his energy. His initial ‘discovery’ of the Leatherface in particular – also after their initial hiatus – was not unlike the experiences that many of us had for bands that became OUR bands. It was an introduction not just to a band and a sound and a poetry that was like no other, but a stronger connection to a community at large; the beginning of an understanding of the ways that many of us relate to and communicate with one another.

The other central thread in the book is an epic journey that our storyteller and his friend and fellow punk rock aficionado Jason (not me) embarked on a quarter-century ago. Over the course of seven weeks in the summer of 1999, the two went on an ambitious journey from London to Dublin. By way of most any mode of transportation you can imagine and with little in the way of a formal plan in the days before widespread cell phone and internet access, the duo wound through places Leeds and Manchester and of course Sunderland and Edinburgh and Glasgow and Belfast and Donegal. There were several pivotal Leatherface-involved moments along the journey that I won’t spoil for you here, but suffice it to say that the trip would test not only their individual mettle and the bonds of their friendship, but like the process of quenching and tempering steel that took place in the gritty ship-building towns like Sunderland, would prove to strengthen their identities and their connection to the scene at large.

The book itself is quite a bit of a journey to embark on. Most of the individual chapters are brief and the individual threads are woven back and forth throughout the tapestry, and if you’re not paying attention, you might get yourself tied in knots trying to remember which timeline we’re on. The venture is incredibly worthwhile though. If you’re a fan of Leatherface (or Franke Stubbs solo I suppose) the band history as ‘peasants in paradise’ is riveting. If you’re just a fan of the scene in a broader sense, you can insert your favorite pivotal band in Leatherface’s place and no doubt identify with the fandom aspects and appreciate the level of import that the music builds in your life. And frankly, if you’re a fan of travel stories – albeit ones written twenty-five years after their journey – it’s a compelling tale of struggle and the increasing knowledge of the self that said struggle can build in us as humans.

MacDonald’s book is available at all the normal booksellers. Obviously buy from a local place if you can. As an added bonus, you can also catch Frankie Stubbs and Graeme Philliskirk together again in Roach Squad, alongside Sim Robson and The Murderburgers’ Alex Keane and the one-and-only Hugo Mudie. They put out a few tracks last month on Little Rocket Records (obviously) and they rule.

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Year in ReView: Vanyaland’s 12 favorite films of 2024

<p>To sum up the state of cinema in 2024, it’s best to paraphrase the poets known as Smash Mouth: “Well, the hits keep coming, and they don’t stop coming.” And it was an industry-wide scramble to see, after being fed to the wolves of tumultuous circumstance with COVID and strikes, if they could hit the ground running. The answer was… sort of? The house is still on fire on the Hollywood side. To name a few examples: Warner Bros. is […]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://vanyaland.com/2024/12/13/year-in-review-vanyalands-12-favorite-films-of-2024/">Year in ReView: Vanyaland’s 12 favorite films of 2024</a> appeared first on <a href="https://vanyaland.com">Vanyaland</a>.</p>

Podcast: Listen to Punknews Podcast #680 – Kevin Shields of Detention!

Episode #680 of the Punknews Podcast is now up! In this episode Kevin Shields of Detention stops by to talk about the band’s Dead Rock ’N Rollers reissue, the band's origin story, the importance of humour in punk, the story behind the song “Dead Rock ’N Rollers”, the legacy of the band, and so much more. Listen to the episode below!

Festivals & Events: Pennywise, Lagwagon, Comeback Kid, more to play Punk In The Park 2025

Punk In The Park has announced its first wave lineup for 2025. Pennywise, Screeching Weasel, Lagwagon, Comeback Kid, Good Riddance, Dead To Me, Manic Hispanic, RKL, The Queers, Channel 3, The Side Eyes, and Knocked Down will be playing the festival. Punk In The Park will take place on May 3 at Cow Palace in San Francisco, California. See the poster below.

The Dollheads release video for "Teenage Runaway"

Las Vegas-based punk rockers The Dollheads have released a video for their new song “Teenage Runaway”. The video was directed and produced by Kaesen and Chase of Mad Rabbit Media. The song is available digitally as well as as a 7-inch (along with their previously released single “See You in Hell”) via Fat Wreck Chords. The Dollheads released their EP Et Cetera in 2023. Check out the video below.

Tours: Cancer Bats announce Ontario tour dates with Mile End, Ethereal Tomb, Escuela Grind

Cancer Bats have announced Ontario tour dates for January and March. They will be joined by Ethereal Tomb and Mile End on their January shows and will be joined by Escuela Grind and Mile End on their March shows. According to the tour announcement on Instagram, these shows will be “the sweaty packed party inspiration to get us all fired up for a new record!” Cancer Bats released their album Psychic Jailbreak in 2023. Check out the dates below.

Hauntu: "Sadist Sun"

San Diego-based post-punks Hauntu have released a new song called “Sadist Sun”. It is available digitally now via Sell The Heart Records and Ana/Kata Music. Hauntu released their debut 7-inch I earlier this year. Check out the song below.

Tours: RKL / Seized Up announce California shows

RKL have announced tour dates for California. The shows will take place in February and early March. Seized Up will be joining them on all dates. RKL will be touring Europe in the spring. Check out the dates below.

Masma Dream World to release new album, share "PLEASE COME TO ME"

Masma Dream World, the project of Devi Mambouka, has announced that she will be releasing a new album. It is called PLEASE COME TO ME and will be out on February 21 via Valley of Search. Masma Dream World has also released the title track. Masma Dream World released her album Play At Night in 2020. Check out the song below.