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Public Housing

by Public Housing

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1.
2.
3.
Caskets 07:39
4.
Stay Awake 10:02
5.
Live @ MOTR 21:13

about

Originally released by Torn Light Records.

"Killer debut LP from Public Housing, the Cincinnati, Ohio-based trio of Chris Adams (Wasteland Jazz Unit; Palindrones et al), John Rich (Wasteland Jazz Unit; Ohio Unsemble; No Reagan! et al), and Jon Lorenz (Wasteland Jazz Unit; Ohio Unsemble; No Reagan! et al). I think this trio usually rips it up brass-strong, as the Wasteland Jazz Unit, but here they’ve ditched their horns, instead tooling-up with guitars. But “Wasteland” remains the dominant feature, seems like these guys just can’t shake it, and that’s often a promising starting point for me. The four tracks that sprawl these grooves conjure bleak more overtly than most things you've heard or seen: like a document of cities crumbling under the weight of the broken system, taking cues from no-wave and spawning some form of contemporary apocalypse blues. I don’t imagine the Cincinnati authorities will be using this LP to attract tourists to mid-western USA, although the record does strike me as a perfectly executed artistic expression of the great nothingness that our masters have bestowed upon us. Dilapidation, dispossession, and a diseased mental/physical environment reverberate from the thick, heavy clanging guitar work, stumbling amongst the dark and damp. If, like most humans in the west, you forgot what it’s like to feel deep anger, then check-in with the drumming here, and if you somehow failed to notice how technology became the latest (and maybe the final?) great battlefield, then give-up your ears to the warped electronics that throb and groan intermittently like a desperate plea for breath. Even the sleeve and insert present visuals of bleak. The vinyl was mastered by Robert Beatty (Hair Police, Three-Legged Race) and this great record was released on the Newport, Kentuck-based Torn Light label, in an edition of 500 copies. This is what “progress” can yield: come gather your harvest."
-Infinite Limits

"With this review, my intention is to get you to take a few steps through the looking glass into a Hellraiser-like universe where pain is beauty, ugliness is music and noise is pleasure. Looming ominously in a filthy back-alley somewhere in this universe is the band Public Housing.
Made up of Chris Adams, Jon Lorenz and John Rich, Public Housing has risen from the ashcan of Wasteland Jazz Unit and have coalesced into a swamp-wave/no-wave monstrosity.
Their new album, the band's first full-length, was mastered by Lexington, KY experimental artist Robert Beatty [Hair Police, Three-Legged Race] and released by Newport's Torn Light Records. There are four tracks to the album, each ranging from 7 to 10 minutes.
Public Housing pushes abstract noise-rock sound forms way beyond anything close to normal comprehension and into something completely non-objective until it is pure sonic energy, ungrounded by the physical world.
"Modern Breathing" begins the album in a troglodyte stomp through a quagmire of discomforting sound. Accompanying a cacophonous clanging and pounding is a shrill ear-splitting swirl of modulated electrical tones. The effect is not unlike that of a dentist's drill.
Similarly, "Caskets" is pure naught-rock that leaves you no better off than you were when you started it. It is the sonic equivalent of burning tires. The music is not so much performed and is it smelted and summoned from some highly-toxic, unstable and radioactive element found only in the deepest rows of the periodic table.
Closing out the album is "Stay Awake," which may be the most 'normal' of the compositions in that the sound of the guitar is most recognizable as a guitar - but there the amount of normalcy ends abruptly. Even this is a purely visceral sludge-tromp.
If idle hands are the devil's workshop then the sound of unhealthy boredom would sound an awful lot like "Black Water Sh**hole." To call the track 'gloomy' just doesn't cut it. It is downright dismal and designed to suck every molecule of energy from the air around you, leaving you unmotivated, morose and hopeless. I like to think of it as the absolute antithesis to "Eye of the Tiger" which, of course, makes it my favorite track of the week.
However, we're on the other side of the mirror where light is dark and awareness of our own mortality makes us know just how alive we really are. Public Housing is the Virgil in our own musical version of The Inferno.
I can say with pretty solid certainty that this album is not for everyone - and it is not an album you catch by accident. Public Housing is a band, and an album, that you must seek out with purpose and great intent. It is very well-recorded and produced - or else it wouldn't capture and transmit the heavy emotion it is intended to.
In that regard, if you are a listener who enjoys noise-core, swamp-core, dead-core, no-core... whatever dark and heavy adjective-core you want to call it, go visit Torn Light Records and get a copy of Public Housing's new LP. It may just become your new most-hated favorite."
-WVXU

credits

released May 30, 2020

Jon Lorenz- guitar, vocals, electronics
John Rich- guitar
Chris Adams- drums

Recorded in 2011
Mastered by Robert Beatty

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Public Housing Cincinnati, Ohio

Dead blues for dead times

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