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Hot Water Music - The New What Next (Remastered) (2004/2020) Hi Res

Hot Water Music - The New What Next (Remastered) (2004/2020) Hi Res

BAND/ARTIST: Hot Water Music

  • Title: The New What Next (Remastered)
  • Year Of Release: 2004/2020
  • Label: Epitaph
  • Genre: Rock, Punk Rock, Emo Rock
  • Quality: 24Bit/44 kHz FLAC
  • Total Time: 00:44:23
  • Total Size: 556 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Poison (2018 Remaster)
02. The End of the Line (2018 Remaster)
03. All Heads Down (2018 Remaster)
04. My Little Monkey Wrench (2018 Remaster)
05. Under Everything (2018 Remaster)
06. There Are Already Roses (2018 Remaster)
07. Keep It Together (2018 Remaster)
08. The Ebb and Flow (2018 Remaster)
09. Bottomless Seas (2018 Remaster)
10. Ink and Lead (2018 Remaster)
11. This Early Grave (2018 Remaster)
12. Giver (2018 Remaster)
13. Last Goodbyes (2018 Remaster)

New What Next's "Keep It Together" sounds like vintage Afghan Whigs, and maybe that's all you need to know about Hot Water Music's third Epitaph effort. The vets from the FLA have added a further postscript to their post-hardcore rumble, veering into a melodic yet slightly jaded maturity resembling that of Gentlemen-era Whigs. The Alkaline Trio's catchy, punky fatalism is another touchstone for what New What Next offers; Hot Water Music also provides a few satisfying holdovers from their early-2000s output. (The stinging double-time clap of "This Early Grave," for example.) But in the melodic meantime, "Under Every Thing" and "All Heads Down" back up "Together" with tense and cynical barbed wire meditations. Distant guitar sustain wrangles around a prickly ride cymbal as Chris Wollard and Chuck Ragan harmonize on the latter's lyrical venom. "All I ask is how we carry on/Tricked and blind, raped and robbed"; "...In the end, you're on your own" are they referring to government dirty tricks, or a more personally cynical world view? The latter seems truer given HWM's somewhat trying existence, band fragmentation and underappreciation being two big issues. "Poison"'s latent Fugazi-isms are softened by echoing Brian McTernan production and plaintive lead vocals, "End of the Line" is a rawer, seasoned-rocker version of the rager being written by every junior varsity Warped Tour hopeful, and "My Little Monkey Wrench" is as touching a love letter as the underground has in 2004. Veterans always endure adversity at some point; the pros put it back into their music, and Hot Water Music certainly has. What's come next is more controlled and sobering, and shows signs of the lives they've lived around the hard core.


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