The Wall

  • New Atomic Rooster Tribute Nuclear Bird “Tyrannical Megalomaniac” Now Available!

    By glassonyonpr

    For Immediate Release

    New Atomic Rooster Tribute Nuclear Bird “Tyrannical Megalomaniac” Now Availabl […]

  • Eclectic Music Ensemble The Vegetarians Release New Album “Bill Haley”

    Press Inquiries: Glass Onyon PR, PH: 1-828-350-8158, [email protected]

    The Vegetarians is a project lead by Hans Annellsson, com […]

  • {French For Rabbits} started life as the duo of Brooke Singer and John Fitzgerald some ten years ago, but by the time of their last album, 2017’s The Weight of Melted Snow they had become a quartet with the a […]

  • HATT are a new band on the scene, but they are already here with their debut 5-track EP. Mind you, although HATT are a new name, those behind it are definitely not, as anyone who has been involved with the […]

  • Wellington quartet SOG are back with their third album, with a somewhat unusual but very Kiwi cover photo. There has just been the one line-up change since their 2018 Slate Clean debut, as Bianca Bailey (vocals, […]

  • The very first album I bought by Rush, back in the mists of time, was ‘Archives’. It seemed like tremendous value to me as it included the first three albums, ‘Rush’, ‘Fly By Night’, and ‘Caress of Steel’. More […]

  • I love Imperative’s press releases, “Beneath burnt orange skies, swamped with thick, grey clouds that move sluggishly across the firmament, propelled by the tired, breathless winds, the remnants of a race cra […]

  • Signal Red may be a newish band, but they can trace their roots back to 2013 when guitarist Steve Grocott was at a loose end due to his band Sevendayz having folded, and he contacted vocalist Lee Small (Phenomena, […]

  • One of the real finds for me last year was the Wellington-based band In The Shallows, who are based around the core of Danni Parsons and Lance Shepherd (the band is completed by Andrew Bain (Fur Patrol) and Nick […]

  • Solitary are back with their fourth full-length album, and although they were formed back in the Nineties, the return of bassist Gareth Harrop finds them now with three members from those days, while lead […]

  • It is probably hard for anyone outside Aotearoa to realise just how important Shihad have been to the NZ music scene, but they have had five #1 albums, including the most recent, 2014’s FVEY, and hold the record f […]

  • Tall Folk are a relatively new band, only coming together at the end of last year and feature Dunedin singer/songwriter Lara Robertson and mid-Western import Jack Ringhand, with both providing lead and harmony […]

  • Blue River Baby, a.k.a. BRBB, are back with the first single from their second album, which will be due out next year. They created quite a stir with their debut release in 2019, hitting the Top Ten on the […]

  • I have been reviewing music for more than 30 years and estimate I have written something like 2 million words on the subject, and I have often been asked the question, “Why?”. The simple reason is that if I did […]

  • What strikes one most about the third album from Tablefox is the sheer diversity of styles on display. True, they are very much rooted in the Eighties and their style is also often very Kiwi, but after that they […]

  • This is the second album by Skank Bandit, a quartet who describe their music as an explosive combination of reggae, rock, ska, funk, metal, and punk, and to be honest they have hit the nail right on the head. When […]

  • Sidewinder are back with their third single, following on from the powerful Mississippi Fire, which came out a few months ago. Again, what we have here is stoner rock, with very strong links to QOTSA, which are […]

  • There is no doubt whatsoever in my mind that one of the most interesting and innovative musicians working today is Dave Brenner, who operates as Gridfailure. I have been listening to a lot of his music (which is a […]

  • In August 2019, Gridfailure performed a fully improvised set which was filmed, and this excerpt taken from it (the excerpt is more than 28 minutes long). The band that night were David Brenner (vocals, percussion, […]

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