A Matter of Public Record

The KVB have a new album out called Tremors. The CD is playing on my stereo as we speak.[1] The KVB are kind of post-punk art rock in the vein of The Jesus and Mary Chain[2], Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, and A Place to Bury Strangers with a dash of goth-vibed Depeche Mode sprinkled in — reverbed guitars, washy synths, lots of drum machines and all that goodness.[3] People would have danced to it at Asylum.

I'm on my third spin in a row. I'll be having a fourth go round as well. Remember when you were a kid and listened to a new album over and over, until you could hardly stand to hear another note ever again? This is the correct technique. It's called listening. I often imagine we first lost our humanity when everyone stopped listening to albums and mixtapes from friends in favor of random songs from computer-generated playlists vomited up by the various online streaming services, but then I remember the single has always been king of the recording industry. We must have lost our humanity somewhere else.

Anyhow, I think The KVB are great; check them out on the Bandcamp.[4]


  1. I love my stereo so much. Seriously, throw your bluetooth speakers out and get a stereo. They're so much better than that trash.[5]
  2. The Jesus and Mary Chain also have a new record out: Glasgow Eyes. I've only listened to it once so far, but I liked it.
  3. I'm sure they (The KVB) would hate that description, but artists are like that. Trust me, if you like JAMC, BRMC, and A Place to Bury Strangers, and you don't hate Depeche Mode, you'll like The KVB.
  4. Nobody paid me to say that. Keep your quarters.
  5. And that includes the Sonos speakers we all paid too much for.

Negative Drive