Every Album Ever with Mike Mansour & Alex Volz
This week we're discussing Lonely People with Power, the latest album by Deafheaven. We've been massive fans of Deafheaven for years, but 2021's Infinite Granite had us split down the middle. Lonely People with Power shows the band returning to black metal in a massive way, shattering any assumptions people may have had that they are now a full-blown shoegaze band. Once again Deafheaven proves they are more than capable songwriters and continue to experiment in innovative ways. Crank this one. ...
info_outlineEvery Album Ever with Mike Mansour & Alex Volz
This week we’re discussing Thunderball, the latest album by Melvins. Technically, this was released as Melvins 1983, which has the band’s very first drummer, Mike Dillard, on drums instead of Dale Crover. Thunderball also features experimental musicians Void Manes and Ni Maitres lending electronic contributions. If you’re a fan of the early 90s sludge era of Melvins, then this is the album for you. Patreon Merch Mike’s EP: Pander Monkey on , , , Mike on Instagram Alex on Bluesky Tom on Instagram History Tom’s stuff: Music on , Podcast on ...
info_outlineEvery Album Ever with Mike Mansour & Alex Volz
The only band to give the Butthole Surfers a run for their money
info_outlineEvery Album Ever with Mike Mansour & Alex Volz
From garage rock to soulful and depressing
info_outlineEvery Album Ever with Mike Mansour & Alex Volz
Two kids whose dad loved them way more than ours did
info_outlineEvery Album Ever with Mike Mansour & Alex Volz
Completely normal rock music
info_outlineEvery Album Ever with Mike Mansour & Alex Volz
About as lonely and bleak as any waiting room
info_outlineEvery Album Ever with Mike Mansour & Alex Volz
The heaviness of Helmet meets the nerdiness of Weezer
info_outlineEvery Album Ever with Mike Mansour & Alex Volz
Dave Lombardo goes goth and takes his wife with him
info_outlineEvery Album Ever with Mike Mansour & Alex Volz
Back from the grave for one last album
info_outlineThis week we’re discussing every album by both The Faith and Void. These two legendary hardcore punk bands will be forever linked because of their split LP from 1982. However, both bands couldn’t be more different in their approach to punk. The Faith (whom Ian MacKaye’s younger brother Alec fronted) was a prime example of quality songwriting and musicianship. Void, on the other hand, was pure ravenous chaos and inadvertent originators of extreme metal. Two of the best to ever do it.
Closing tracks: “Slowdown” by The Faith from Subject to Change (1983); “Red Death” by Void from Potion For Bad Dreams (1983)
Patreon
https://www.patreon.com/everyalbumever
Merch
https://pandermonkey.creator-spring.com/
Mike’s EP:
Pander Monkey on Bandcamp, Spotify, Apple,
Instagram:
Mike @pandermonkey
Alex @everyalbumalex
Tom @tomosmansounds
History Tom’s stuff:
Music on Spotify, Apple
Podcast on Spotify, YouTube
Substack
Website
Albums we discussed this episodes…
Faith/Void Split (1982)
Subject to Change EP by The Faith (1983)
Condensed Flesh EP by Void (1992; recorded 1981)
Potion For Bad Dreams (1983; unreleased)