Author: Team Uber

Naked Roommate – ‘Do The Duvet’ (Upset The Rhythm (UK)/Trouble In Mind (USA))

Naked Roommate is a side-project that grew legs, a relaxed, inexpensive, creative diversion that was the 2018 brainchild of Amber Sermeńo and Andy Jordan, previously of Oakland post-punk dance outfit The World. They released a six-track self-titled digital mini album in September 2018, which was also available on a cassette tape, which was limited to one hundred copies of course. Ah the nostalgia. Later joined by Alejandra Alcala (Blues Lawyer/Preening) and Michael Zamora (bAd bAd/Exit Group), the fully formed Naked Roommate gained a decent live reputation and produced the 33-minute, ten-track debut album ‘Do The Duvet’. This time we get red or black vinyl and a red-case cassette option! 

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Black Sun – ‘Silent Enemy’ (Rockshots Records)

What do you do when your vocalist departs the band mid-way through recording your new album? Do you just abandon the whole project and start again after recruiting a new vocalist or do you get creative? Well Ecuador’s Black Sun opted for the latter and got their producer to recruit some of Finland’s finest metal vocalists to finish off their EP ‘Silent Enemy’ with some fantastic guest slots.

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Intercepting Pattern – ‘The Encounter’ (Rising Nemesis)

Just like there’s more than one way to skin a cat (apparently), there’s also more than one way to record an album as a group of well-established musicians proved when they came together as Intercepting Pattern and began to work on their debut album ‘The Encounter’. Instead of following a traditional structured approach to recording, these progressive metal anomalies opted for a more improvisational approach to form an album that promises to get the old grey matter functioning.

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Rikard Sjöblom’s Gungfly – ‘Alone Together’ (InsideOut)

As part of the highly talented new wave of prog rockers, alongside such luminaries such as Steven Wilson, Rickard Sjöblom is one of the more familiar names to emerge into the spotlight in the mid-90s to mid-Noughties. Taking his lead from some of the first major wave of UK prog acts such as YES, Genesis and Marillion, he has consistently put out some highly capable work over almost 20 years, through Beardfish into his own Gungfly project, with this latest opus a continuation of the sterling work he has created previously.

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