




Push
Since emerging in 2015, Sextile have been a party-provoking force on the LA underground, capable of kicking up a riot with the raw-edged squall of a synth or the sharp-elbowed jerk of a guitar.
Sextile are now ready to rage with a serotonin-boosting new album, a new group dynamic, faster BPMs, and an even wilder new direction. Recorded in Yucca Valley, Push bounces and bops at the fringes of hardcore dance music, with the hallmarks of drum & bass, gabber and trance illuminating the record like glow sticks at a ā90s Fantazia rave.
āContortionā introduces the album with shadowy vocals from Keehn and a ā00s-ready twist of dirty electro bass, setting the tone for the dance-punk rave-up that unfolds across 11 attention-grabbing tracks. Thereās plenty of historic teen angst and biting social commentary written into the albumās vivid tales and misadventures. Balancing storytelling with face-melting synths that turn the tune into an acid trance character study, āNo Funā is penned from the perspective of a teenager trying to flee their town.
A punk spirit underscores the album. The clueās in the name with āCrassy Mel,ā which partly serves as a high-energy dedication to ā70s anarcho-punk legends Crass. The trackās head banging heft, vocal yelping, and Prodigy-shaped breakbeats accentuate the albumās over whelming sense of fun. Plus, the dreamy ambient wash at the end of the song is the ultimate palate-cleanser.
Push was inspired by the kind of pleasure-seeking music fans whose social calendar comprises both the punk show and the rave. Josh Wink, Iggy Pop, Goldie, and early XL Recording shave all been name checked as influences onPush, and the dance floor remains a constant presence. Repping their place of origin, āNew Yorkā brings these musical touchstones off the page, guiding the album like an acid-soaked lodestar with its grinning nod to āHigher State ofConsciousnessā and a whirly gig of music-box synths. There are still nods and āhellosā to the caustic post-punk of Sextileās earlier work. Sextile havenāt relinquished their punk credentials, theyāve just given them a smiley-faced revamp.
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Description
Since emerging in 2015, Sextile have been a party-provoking force on the LA underground, capable of kicking up a riot with the raw-edged squall of a synth or the sharp-elbowed jerk of a guitar.
Sextile are now ready to rage with a serotonin-boosting new album, a new group dynamic, faster BPMs, and an even wilder new direction. Recorded in Yucca Valley, Push bounces and bops at the fringes of hardcore dance music, with the hallmarks of drum & bass, gabber and trance illuminating the record like glow sticks at a ā90s Fantazia rave.
āContortionā introduces the album with shadowy vocals from Keehn and a ā00s-ready twist of dirty electro bass, setting the tone for the dance-punk rave-up that unfolds across 11 attention-grabbing tracks. Thereās plenty of historic teen angst and biting social commentary written into the albumās vivid tales and misadventures. Balancing storytelling with face-melting synths that turn the tune into an acid trance character study, āNo Funā is penned from the perspective of a teenager trying to flee their town.
A punk spirit underscores the album. The clueās in the name with āCrassy Mel,ā which partly serves as a high-energy dedication to ā70s anarcho-punk legends Crass. The trackās head banging heft, vocal yelping, and Prodigy-shaped breakbeats accentuate the albumās over whelming sense of fun. Plus, the dreamy ambient wash at the end of the song is the ultimate palate-cleanser.
Push was inspired by the kind of pleasure-seeking music fans whose social calendar comprises both the punk show and the rave. Josh Wink, Iggy Pop, Goldie, and early XL Recording shave all been name checked as influences onPush, and the dance floor remains a constant presence. Repping their place of origin, āNew Yorkā brings these musical touchstones off the page, guiding the album like an acid-soaked lodestar with its grinning nod to āHigher State ofConsciousnessā and a whirly gig of music-box synths. There are still nods and āhellosā to the caustic post-punk of Sextileās earlier work. Sextile havenāt relinquished their punk credentials, theyāve just given them a smiley-faced revamp.
















