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Haulix Recommends: Sharptooth – ‘Transitional Forms’

On their debut album, Transitional Forms, Sharptooth reminds us of the power music wields and why more artists should use their platform to influence meaningful change.

2020 is giving everyone a lesson in privilege that we won’t soon forget. The vast majority of people now understand the plight of others in a way that is undeniable. Anyone still refusing to acknowledge the discrepancies and advantages that exist due to class, age, disability, race, gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, and religion are merely choosing to ignore facts. That lack of acceptance is poisoning our culture and throttling the progress of society. It’s a plague that, like our current pandemic, needs to be stamped out of existence before we can move forward as a species. Empathy and understanding are essential for systemic change, but far too many continue to reveal their positions of privilege by remaining silent. In the words of Sharptooth, wielding such power must be nice.

On Transitional Forms, Sharptooth thrusts a dagger straight into the heart of hate and ignorance with thought-provoking lyricism and chaotic instrumentation. Their sound is propulsive, both musically and lyrically. It’s like a freight train that is racing at such highs speeds that the cars begin to come off the tracks ever-so-slightly. One is always wondering whether the band will maintain the momentum or aggression of what’s transpiring, but disaster is narrowly averted at the last possible second. 

But there are a lot of bands that people describe as being loud and fast. Sharptooth sets themselves apart by turning the tables on their scene, and in doing so, modern alternative music as a whole. The album opener, “Say Nothing (In The Absence Of Content),” pokes fun at the empty mosh calls prevalent in hardcore music while also commenting on how certain artists get away with writing music for the sake of making noise. That isn’t a criticism of those artists as much as it of the scene itself. Groups with people of color or women (or both) are expected to use their platform in a more meaningful way, but others are not. Sharptooth says that they could write the songs everyone else performs, but they wouldn’t get the same praise. Society expects them to do more, say more, and to stand for something. Other groups should be held to those same standards, which is accurate, and the band isn’t afraid to say that out loud.

Transitional Forms is about more than music scenes and whatever stupid rules people try to enforce within it. Much like Sharptooth’s catalog, the album takes aim at numerous political and societal issues. It touches on economic strife, sexual assault, vulnerability, and how far too many people never practice what they preach. It captures the struggle and anger experienced by oppressed people from different walks of life and lays bare the fact that things must change. It’s a call to action as much as it is a razor-sharp criticism of those who continue to walk through life, turning a blind eye to the realities of existence. The group’s travels over the last decade have shown them that most people want things to change, but few are willing to get off their ass and do the work necessary. Sharptooth is already doing their part, so why can’t you?

Haulix Recommends is a recurring feature where the Haulix staff chooses one or more recent releases from their clients. Click here to discover more great music being promoted through Haulix.

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Haulix Recommends: The Amity Affliction

On their seventh full-length effort, Brisbane natives The Amity Affliction revel in the struggle to uncover the people we need to become.

Australian post-hardcore favorites The Amity Affliction are internationally recognized for their fierce lyricism and hard-hitting music. Their time in the spotlight has a devoted following of fans who wear their hearts on their sleeves with clenched fists and weary eyes. For them, the music The Amity Affliction creates is about more than trudging through the experience of existence. Fans know the group is writing to inspire rebellion, both from the world as we know it and from the people they were in the past, in hopes we all seek to reborn as better, more empathetic human beings.

The Amity Affliction reaches new heights on Everyone Loves You…Once You Leave Them. Matt Squire’s production gives the material a larger-than-life feel that envelopes listeners in a journey through heartache and personal development that strays far from predictable genre tropes. “All My Friends Are Dead” and “Soak Me in Bleach,” which lead the record and were the first to be shared from the album, celebrate the struggle toward progress instead of lamenting the hardships of life. They peel back the facade of artistry being some higher calling and reveal the emotional and spiritual battles being fought by the group’s members daily.

The album reaches surprising depths with “Catatonia” and “Forever.” The first addresses a friends’ suicide head-on, while the latter takes a very blunt approach to address vocalist Joel Birch’s bi-polar diagnosis. These topics are becoming more common in culture today, with a growing audience of people in various stages of suffering pleading for open dialogues. Still, The Amity Affliction is one of the few rock bands in recent memory to take a direct approach to the issues. They don’t view mental health as a problem for others to solve, but rather as something we are all responsible for understanding

Everyone Loves You…Once You Leave Them sets a high bar for all rock releases coming out in 2020. It’s no longer enough to write good riffs and easily repeatable lyrics that tell people to be resilient, persistent, or whatever cliche version of masculinity you’ve come to expect from modern hard rock bands. Music has the power to influence change, both globally and on a profoundly personal level. It’s an art form that has long needed a healthy dose of sincerity, at least as far as rock is concerned, and The Amity Affliction has delivered that in abundance with their latest LP. They have given us a soundtrack to working through the pain rather than ignoring it and to overcoming our demons rather than pretending they don’t exist. They are doing the work that is needed to lead better lives, and we are fortunate to be granted a front-row seat to their evolution.

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Monday Motivation: Senses Fail

If you’re anything like me, you probably started the day by recognizing that the start of a new work week had indeed arrived and then immediately began shaking your fists at the sky in anger. Monday is rarely anyone’s favorite day, and from what I have seen firsthand it feels safe to say it’s the one day of the week some people outright hate. I guess to them the arrival of the work week symbolizes the end of their quote/unquote freedom, and as a result they head into the office/factory/restaurant/store with a negative outlook already on their mind. This leads to bad attitudes, which only makes the experience of being at work worse, and for some reason it also seems to make time slow to a crawl. We’re not about that life, and we hope this post can do the same you that the song contained within it did for us.

It was around 4 o’clock in the afternoon last Saturday when I realized that I have spent over a decade of my life listening to Senses Fail. At 27 years of age, that makes my connection to vocalist and lyricist Buddy Nielsen one of the longest-running relationships of my entire life, easily putting every girlfriend I’ve ever had to shame. Heck, outside my parents and one or two select artists there are few, if any, whose nuanced take on the world around them has connected with me on such a deeply personal as his, and even less have been able to sustain that connection for even a year, let alone twelve. 

If you asked me why that is the way my life has played out even two weeks ago I probably couldn’t have told you. I had not yet made the connection myself, so of course there is no way I could have relayed such information to you, but having sat with this notion for a few sleepless nights (due to summer heat, not my connection to Senses Fail) I’ve reached a conclusion. Though the content I relate to has changed from album to album, there is a brash and relentless honesty riddled through each and every Senses Fail record that is not afraid to tear down everything, including the person uttering each line. It’s an all-encompassing sense (no pun intended) of ‘why not tell it like it is, for once’ that keeps me coming back again and again. I never know what Buddy will choose to share, but I know it will be true, and that is more than you can expect from the vast majority of artists working today.

This week, Senses Fail will release Pull The Thorns From Your Heart, their most experimental and thought-provoking release to date. I know I just spent several paragraphs relaying how honest the band has been with every release, but there is something unflinching boldness to this record that strips away every preconceived notion fans have about what Senses Fail are supposed to be and introduces a new, fully-matured band that knows exactly what they want to say and how it needs to be conveyed to listeners in order to make the biggest impact. It’s a cathartic listening experience that leads one to question not only the lies they’ve told others, but the ones they’ve been telling themselves, and how the time spent running from the truth has only been time wasted. You can say it’s good enough, but life isn’t meant to be lived in a way that is just okay. You’re supposed to take chances and, as the band explains on the record, “leap into the great unknown.”

I encourage all of you to make time for _Pull The Thorns From Your Heart _in the days ahead. This summer has been filled with great music, but very few have the potential to make as big of a positive impact as this one, and it just so happens to be one of the most diverse offerings of any group from the alternative world in all of 2015. It will make you feel in ways music rarely does, and that’s exactly what you need to head into the week ahead. You need something that will shake you from the comfort of whatever routine you have allowed yourself to fall into and make you reevaluate the path you have chosen, as well as the people you’ve asked to join you on your journey. 

It’s time to wake up and live the life you were meant to pursue, with love for yourself and others. _Pull The Thorns From Your Heart _will help, but the work is up to you. I believe in you.

James Shotwell is the Marketing Coordinator for Haulix. He is also a professional entertainment critic, covering both film and music, as well as the co-founder of Antique Records. Feel free to tell him you love or hate the article above by connecting with him on Twitter. Bonus points if you introduce yourself by sharing your favorite Simpsons character.

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