
Ceremonyโs lead guitarist Anthony Anzaldo doesnโt want to talk about the fact that his band has been around for over ten years. Or that theyโve drifted away from the hardcore genre that made them, or that they jumped ship from their long-time label, Matador Records, to join Relapse Records instead. Or that their sixth album will mark four years since the iconic punk band has released any new material. These things arenโt โreallyโ important. What matters is that โIn the Spirit World Nowโ is Ceremonyโs most driving, intelligent collection of songs to date.
โWe knew this had to be the best thing we have ever done,โ admits Anzaldo. โWe couldnโt come back after four years with a record that only had a few good songs.โ
Produced by Will Yip (Title Fight, Circa Survive, Turnover) and mixed by engineer Ben Greenberg (The Men, Pharmakon, Hank Wood And The Hammerheads), In the Spirit World Nowโโ grows with each listen, balancing Yipโs pop sensibilities with Greenbergโs noise-punk influence through dramatic, shining synthesizer hooks and a mature vocal strategy. Drummer Jake Casarotti and bassist Justin Davis power through the 11-tracks as a strong yet sparse backbone that interlocks with guitarists Andy Nelson and Anzaldo to create a pop-centric, post-punk canvas for frontman Ross Farrar to expel the most vulnerable parts of himself. (And, thankfully, there are many.)
Farrar, who has been studying and teaching at the โSyracuse University MFA Poetry Programโ for the past three years, has found himself as a vocalist on โSpirit Worldโโ, not only sounding more confident and in the pocket than he ever has before, but exploring amorphous lyrical territory about arrested development, botched relationships, and the never-ending hamster wheel of self-destruction so many creatives fall into.
โโIโve been very interested in will, as in a personโs faculty of consciousness and how we navigate actions and self-control,โ Farrar says. โIโve been worried for a long time that my lack of self-control will inevitably destroy me, so any paranoia on that matter is focused on this record.โ
Spirit Worldโ is a carefully composed punk record by a band who is so in tune with one another as players that their physical separation didnโt affect the music when it came time to get together and work. Despite living in opposite ends of the country, they met up, rehearsed the new material, and demoed it out in Anaheim at a friendโs studio. After two weeks, the tracks were loose with Farrar only mumbling melody ideas on top of the band. A few months later, they linked up with producer Will Yip and he flushed out the demos, helping develop the structure as the songs took shape in the studio. To add some grit to their slew of polished post-punk hits, Anzaldo called on Greenberg to help develop melodies and interject synthesizers and keyboards into the songs before he mixed the record.
โWe really took it song by song on this album,โ says Anzaldo. โWe pushed ourselves more than any other record. We didnโt have a lot of time together, so the time we did have was precious, and we were hyper-focused on making the best songs possible.โ
Spirit Worldโ โis full of layered sonic fury and anxiety, each song building up to a point and then descending down through a militant hook. โTurn Away the Bad Thingโ sets the tone, guitars climbing around the driving bass line, as Farrar sings, โโItโs getting harder for me to be alright/Eyes adjusting to the dark/The momentum of all these last resorts built inside of me.โ Songs like โPresaging the Endโ and โCalming Waterโ feel romantic and distressed, while โFurther I Wasโ and โYears of Loveโ are driven by Farrarโs rebellious energy as he repeats the hook with a deadpan realness. โYears of love can be forgotten/In the hatred of a day.โ But the true stand-out is the title track, โIn the Spirit World Nowโ, a haunting pop gem with a sticky chorus and lead synth riff that plants itself in your head as Farrar chants the trackโs name over and over like a mantra. โThe spirit world is a sort of nebulous and ectoplasmic place where things may not be quite what they seem,โ he says. โSpirit Worldโโ marks a milestone for this legendary Northern California punk outfit who have stayed true to themselves as songwriters throughout massive sonic growth throughout their long, storied career.
โNot reflecting on the evolution of the band is what keeps us motivated,โ Anzaldo admits. โThere is always a song we havenโt written, a band we havenโt played with, artwork we havenโt thought of. We are creators by nature, not by choice.โ

Rejection Pact
Hardcore band based out of Boise, ID featuring members of Stepbrothers and Alone. Rejection Pact celebrating their new record release. Order the new LP โCAN WE WAIT?โ now https://safeinsidestore.com/products/rejection-pact-can-we-wait-12

Chief Broom
Heavy, brooding and yet uplifting, CHIEF BROOM reveals reflections of the fragility, monotony, beauty and horrors of everyday life. Centered around the songwriting of Boise, Idaho based multi-instrumentalist Shadrach Tuck and featuring a revolving cast of collaborators including guitarists William โCheeseโ Cheeseman (Sly Moon Sutra) and Frankie Tillo (Thick Business, Frankie Tillo), as well as contributions from Max Voulelis (Porcelain Tongue) on drums and Jake Marchus on keys. CHIEF BROOMโs debut album โhidden in plain sightโ also features strings and woodwind contributions played by Ben Youtz, Kayce Guthmiller, and Shaun Scrivner.
A labor of love, this album was painstakingly completed in the wake of band co-founder TJ Tuckโs death, by his friends, family, and bandmates to honor his legacy and memorialize his profound impact on the Boise music scene. His presence is pronounced throughout โhidden in plain sightโ.