#die verlierer
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smartfox · 10 months ago
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DIE VERLIERER - Notausgang
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goodbysunball · 3 months ago
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The hard blues
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Perfect timing, right in the midst of list season. There's a lot waiting in the queue, though these records seem to have made the most impact. More in the line soon, a bunch of 7"s and cassettes and maybe a few more LPs, and eventually the obligatory look back. Mounds of plastic await:::
Anadol & Marie Klock, La Grande Accumulation LP (Pingipung)
Debut collaboration between Turkey's Anadol and France's Marie Klock, and it's an inspired one. I was familiar with Anadol's work from two prior LPs, but Marie Klock's intentionally absurd, voluble electronic music I've only recently discovered. On La Grande Accumulation, Anadol's kosmische-jazz comfortably sidles alongside Marie Klock's mostly spoken, sometimes sung stream of consciousness vocals, and the effect is deliciously intoxicating. Sometimes MK swims against the current of the music, as on the opening title track, and sometimes the pattering drums and synths pull her in, resulting in the bangin' disco-lite of "Sirop Amer (La Goule)" or the chanson-meets-giallo soundtrack on "Sonate Au Jambon." The first five tracks glide almost frictionlessly despite the sometimes frantic sing-speaking, but the final track throws a wrench into the proceedings, something that happens on every Anadol album (check out "Adieu" on Uzun Havalar, for example) and almost undoubtedly welcomed by Marie Klock. "La Reine Des Bordels" begins innocently enough in washes of synthesizer, but shifts into a double-timed square dance, then blaring ominous church organ music, and finally a demented waltz, Marie Klock breathlessly covering the proceedings throughout. It's sort of a fitting end to the record, something jarring to tie together a record which at points can feel like an ASMR exercise and even meditative. Gotten a whole lot of mileage out of La Grande Accumulation, a record greater than the sum of its parts, immediately satisfying without sacrificing the avantgarde leanings of its makers.
Bilders, Dustbin of Empathy LP (Grapefruit/Sophomore Lounge)
Patois Counselors, Limited Sphere LP (ever/never)
Rarely bundle reviews together but these two seem of a piece. Both are loquacious, expansive, lyrics-first records, and both artists have graduated from biting, angular post-punk to a more relaxed sound. 
Bill Direen's long-running Bilders dropped an LP and cassette this year, and he seems to have found the sweet spot between the songs and the poetry presented in recent live performances. The band backing up Bill on Dustbin of Empathy mirrors, catches and gets out of the way of his vocals, their music consisting mostly of brushed drums, softly strummed guitars and the occasional keyboard or organ. At first blush it's almost definitely too slight to appeal to a broader crowd, but Bill Direen is nothing if not a captivating showman and engrossing storyteller. His lyrics cast a wide net, spanning the globe and touching on war, age and morality with the light, deft touch enabled by his 60-some odd years of life experience. His delivery is usually muted, but he occasionally breaks out a caricature or odd pronunciation, as on "Scaribus" or "Caprice and Nemesis," and "Obedience" is as worked up as he allows himself to get. Direen's lyrics feel wise and matter-of-fact, and are unobtrusively slipped in, like the lines "Some voices I will never hear again/Did not live, as long as I do" leading off "Comrades." As a good documentarian, the facts are presented but the margins are, inevitably, colored in with his own feelings. Repeat listens turn up more lyrical gems, and in the end Dustbin emerges as a quiet triumph against the attention economy.
Patois Counselors' Bo White possesses a similarly keen, sharp eye for detail, and if anything Limited Sphere seems to partially claw back any notion of "skewering" detected on previous PC records. There's a sense that White is equally charmed, intrigued and bewitched by the ecosystem of any given local underground arts scene, including the outsized forces restricting and suffocating them. The band plays things with a softer touch and wider palette, ending up somewhere like The Art of Walking-era Pere Ubu crossed with the National's quieter moments across Alligator and Boxer (see: "Fountains of UHF" or "Wrong Department"). The drumming across Limited Sphere is the engine, crisp and busy, deftly navigating and directing sheets of guitar, synths, woodwinds and piano throughout. White's low, nasally delivery make the lyrics tough to make out at first, but the utterance of "Is this what we like?" on "Accoutrement" feels apropos to a world ever more excited by Spotify Wrapped. More natural and less tense than The Optimal Seat, Limited Sphere feels like a collection of short stories, the complex-yet-smooth music a Trojan horse for Bo White's lyrics to be fed inside your skull, lingering and rattling for weeks. Sounds like homework to some, but I'll happily be revisiting, untangling and piecing together Limited Sphere for months.
The Body, The Crying Out of Things LP (Thrill Jockey)
A new LP by the Body, sans official collaborators, is generally a shoo-in for mention as one of the best records of the year around these parts. But, to be fair, the last few "solo" records on Thrill Jockey feel somewhat uneven with age. The most recent, the torrential grey-out of I've Seen All I Need to See, felt like the serpent eating its own tail, a powerful but defeatingly cynical record that seemed to serve as an endpoint. After a number of collaborations, the band returns and sounds refreshed, even bright amidst its shockwave-emitting cymbal crashes and tortured howls. There is a clarity across The Crying Out of Things not heard since I Shall Die Here, resulting in a lean 36 minutes that flies by, dexterously shifting between hard, distorted beats, mantle-cracking chords and samples caked in static. While it's hard to improve upon a track like "End of Line," the Body's contributors more than leave their mark: Ben Eberle's searing vocal contributions feel especially caustic on "Removal," and the back half of "The Building" bursts through Felicia Chen's quietly powerful turn in a way the trio didn't really allow themselves on Orchards of a Futile Heaven. Things still feel dark and cavernous, at times even bleak, but the overall effect is that of the band blasting down walls and letting some light slip in. As usual, the duo turns in one of the best records of the year, but this time it feels invigorating, a call to arms or at the very least a shot in one. If you're unfamiliar, here's your entry point.
Dead Door Unit, Abandon CD (Tribe Tapes)
I last checked in with Philly's Dead Door Unit (one K. Geiger) back in 2022 with Laugh at the Devil, a more than compelling suite of creaking, looping noise in the vein of Modern Jester as I recall, but this year's Abandon is on a whole 'nother level. On Abandon, Geiger's not necessarily shedding the influence of Dilloway, Hanson Records and any number of Midwestern noiseniks, but using it instead as a jumping off point to create these lingering, unsettling long-form tracks. Some in-track transitions, especially on "Clutter (Until the Flies Gather)," can unintentionally jar the listener from a trance, and the relative dearth of blistering noise across most of the CD may leave some looking elsewhere. But if you strap in for the duration, the album becomes increasingly engaging from start to finish. Somewhere between the last few minutes of "Christmas Alley" and the beginning of “Windmill Hypnosis” is where the immersion begins, and the looping, chattering, scratching noise begins to induce either a fight-or-flight response or a sort of fever dream, the listener wrapped up in isolation by sweltering noise. Occasionally the music startles and sears, like the first third of "She Knows How to Reach Us," but Geiger uses the remainder of the track to masterfully pull apart that noxious cloud of static and slowly put it back together again. The one-two of "She Knows" followed by the lonesome piano loops on "Melrose (Street of Dreams)" is one of the high points for my listening this year, a real trip within 26 minutes that's surprisingly affecting by its end. Abandon is a towering, lengthy statement, but one that signals Dead Door Unit's arrival as a potentially generational talent.
Die Verlierer, Notausgang LP (Bretford/Mangel)
Leather jacket garage rock is usually something that I avoid, unless, apparently, it's delivered in a different language. Those Pierre & Bastien LPs still hold up, and now Germany's Die Verlierer deliver another strong take on their second LP, Notausgang. The record, completely sung-shouted in German, also sports a perfect crunchy-warm vintage production, yet still raw enough to generate friction. Tracks like "Das Gift," "Attentat" and "Adrenalin" capably rip, but the production makes the songs feel like some recently unearthed singles from the late '70s/early '80s. Better yet is when the band keeps the intensity but practices restraint with the guitars: the motor-mouthed vocals carry "Allesfresser," which already sounds like a future classic, and the raw "Made / D.M.A.IP" oughta kill live. Notausgang delves even further, slowing things down and drawing in the listener on the tense title track, and even throwing a day-dreamy guitar line into the languid "Stacheldraht," one of the best songs here. The track sequencing is a bit jarring, especially across the first three tracks, but that's a criticism that doesn't hold a lot of water for music best experienced in person. Works in the recorded setting, too, and I'm still a little surprised how much Notausgang was and continues to be played this year. Die Verlierer's open-ended approach to scuzzy rock 'n roll very much transcends the notion of a Crime cosplay act, resulting in a more restrained, durable record that appears primed to reward for years to come. Killer cover art, too.
Septage, Septic Worship (Intolerant Spree of Infesting Forms) LP (Me Saco Un Ojo)
Denmark's gore-obsessed death metal trio Septage returns after two solid EPs to drop a full-length, one that's completely mowed down expectations. A lot of death metal fixated on gore, or merging with goregrind, can safely be dismissed. Too often the bands are trying too hard to be the sonic equivalent of a shocking B-movie horror film, or often even worse. Septic Worship nimbly sidesteps that trap, and delivers 20 minutes of blistering and crushing takes on goregrind without taking itself too seriously. The respective barrages that open up each side of the record are hair-raising, teeth-clenching moments, and from there the record's sides glide from full-on grind to lumbering death metal drops with ease. "Emetic Rites," which opens up the second side, packs everything Septage does so well in just over two minutes, though almost 2/3 of the tracks are left smoldering within 90 seconds, which makes differentiating songs a real challenge. It's not like you put on something like Septage to analyze the nine seconds of "Septic Septic," though; it's there to blast the cobwebs out, chip a tooth or two, and help you come out on the other side reinvigorated, if a bit raw. This is easily my favorite metal or metal-adjacent record of the year, an uncompromising yet ridiculously fun record. Clearly the lyrics out this as something not necessarily apropos to the moment, but Septic Worship is powerful enough to drown out the constant buzzing, grandstanding and distracting faux-outrage that makes up 90% of modern existence. Consider it a bit of self-preservation in an absolutely mad world, or just strap in and let it knock you around - either way, it's a strong antidote to endless doom scrolling and pointless anger.
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dustedandsocial · 4 months ago
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trvgbild · 6 months ago
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dystopian september
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linksvorne · 1 year ago
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109. Die VERLIERER. 2023-10-03 @ Arena (kleine Halle) (w/ F.E.I.D.L.)
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plattenabendonline · 2 years ago
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Die Verlierer - Mann im Mond
Joerg
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gartenwerkzeug · 18 days ago
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Bin gerade dabei für die Buchmesse Sachen zu bedrucken. Und Leute, ich bin so tempted mir selbst Tassen, Gläser, Taschen, Kissen usw. mit Spatort-Stuff zu bedrucken. Einfach weil ich es kann.
How to resist the temptation...
Spätestens, wenn ich mich an die Tassen machen, werde ich nicht mehr widerstehen können mir Adam und Leo auf eine zu drucken. 🫠
EdN was hast du getaaaan?
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dvnyaaa · 10 months ago
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seepweed · 5 months ago
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ich bin ein normaler bürger holt mich hier raus. in fünf monaten müssen wir wählen und die optionen dabei sind: quasi-fraktion linke, "chancellor era" habeck, "...doof" scholz, "ihr seid alle scheiße" lindner und "konservativer als die kirche" merz. wollt ihr mich eigentlich alle ficken?!
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denschnappichmir · 2 years ago
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Ich: Nein, ich steigere mich nicht in die Wilden Kerle rein, weil diese Filme literally keinen anderen Sinn haben außer, dass Kinder Fußball mögen.
Auch ich: der gesamte erste Teil ist eine riesige Allegorie für Leons internalized homophobia und seine ungeklärten Gefühle gegenüber Fabi.
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justalexx-things · 1 year ago
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Falls ihr noch mehr heulen wollt 🥲💔
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dustedandsocial · 9 months ago
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Die Verlierer - Notausgang
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bibastibootz · 1 year ago
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Tatort Stuttgart Fanfics, die ich in meinem Leben brauche und irgendwann einmal schreiben werde:
• Alters WG: Nicht nur Thorsten braucht das, nein, auch ich! Thorsten und Basti beim Abendessen, beim Fernsehen und Brettspiele spielen, bei Wochenendausflügen, beim Kampf um die Dusche, beim Wäsche Waschen, auf dem gemeinsamen Weg zur Arbeit, und und und.
• Maja & Henri: Basti vermisst seine Kinder und er hat eine reunion mit den beiden verdient. Vielleicht auch im Zusammenhang mit der Alters WG, wodurch Thorsten nämlich merkt, wie sehr Basti seine Kinder vermisst. Deshalb organisiert Thorsten einen Samstag zu viert und als Maja und Henri dann abends wieder gehen um bei Freund*innen zu übernachten, überfällt Basti Thorsten mit einer fetten Umarmung, weil sein Herz gerade zu voll ist zum Sprechen und zum "Danke" sagen.
• Bastis "Jugendfreund": Ah ja, der Jugendfreund eines jeden Tatort Ermittlers. Ich hab sowieso einen soft spot für die Teenagerzeiten von KHKs, also würde ich gerne in die Jugendzeit von Basti schauen, insbesondere eines bi Bastis. Mit 16 oder so outet sich sein bester Freund Clemens bei ihm und vielleicht gesteht er Basti auch seine Liebe und das wirft Basti total aus der Bahn. Vielleicht ist er auch in Clemens verliebt, vielleicht auch nicht, aber auf jeden Fall ist es sehr #healing und #comforting.
• alternatives "Grabenkämpfe": Passend zum queeren Jugendfreund (aber ohne Outing in der Jugend) trifft Basti wieder auf Clemens so nach über 10 Jahren. Basti sieht den Ring an Clemens' Finger und fragt eifrig nach, wer denn die Glückliche sei, nur damit Clemens ihm sagt, dass er mit einem Mann verheiratet ist. Alternative zur Alternative: Basti ist hier schon von Julia getrennt und auch Clemens ist single und das Wiedersehen entflammt längst vergessene/verdrängte Gefühle.
• Thorsten erzählt vom Ex-Freund: Wie genial wäre es bitte, wenn Thorsten-"[Frauen?] Keine Ahnung, ich bin da kein Spezialist."-Lannert sich an einem gemütlichen Abend mit Sebastian über dies und jenes unterhält und dann auf einmal so droppt, dass er mal einen Freund hatte???? Bastis Kopf würde explodieren, meiner vermutlich auch.
• canon bi Basti & Alters WG: Thorsten ist über's Wochenende weg und Basti hat die WG für sich alleine. Aus irgendeinem Grund kommt Thorsten aber früher zurück am Sonntagmorgen und hat noch schnell frische Brötchen geholt. Im Bad hört er die Dusche laufen und er ruft sowas wie "Bin schon wieder da." durch die Tür und geht dann zur Küche, wo ein überrumpelter Sebastian mit hochrotem Kopf am Küchentisch sitzt und über seine eigenen Worte stolpert, als er erklärt, wer da gerade im Badezimmer ist. Als ein paar Minuten später ein Mann mit nassen Haaren in die Küche kommt, weiß Thorsten nicht ganz, ob er ihm ein Brötchen anbieten oder erst einmal die Hand reichen soll.
• Thorsten hat einen schönen Tag: Ich hab hier definitiv zu wenig Thorsten, also möchte ich einfach, dass er einen schönen, entspannten Tag hat. Vielleicht macht er an einem himmlischen Frühlingstag eine kleine Spritztour und dann zu Hause (ja, natürlich wieder die Alters WG!) überrascht Sebastian ihn mit seinem Lieblingsessen, natürlich selbst gekocht!
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2ofswords · 6 months ago
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Guess who is writing Last Hour again???
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borvooven · 8 months ago
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8 hours then I'll finally see the love of my life again (the north sea)💕
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endosexual · 10 months ago
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Beim vorbeilatschen an 30 wahlplakaten ist mir grade erst aufgefallen dass ja heidelberg HD und nich HB abgekürzt wird 😭😭😭 was zur hölle
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