Category Archives: News

Addicted To Media Reviews Penguins Kill Polar Bears

“Sweeping soundscapes, reverb-laden guitars, searing hooks and vocals that pull at the heart strings. This is the sound of Penguins Kill Polar Bears, a post-rock four-piece band hailing from Linlithgow in Scotland. Featuring Ben Proudlock on guitars and vocals; Fraser Sanaghan on guitars; Gavin Cormack on bass; and Kieran McGuickan on drums, Penguins Kill Polar Bears have been together since 2008 and are renowned for their explosive and unmissable live performances. Their experimental sound puts them right up there amongst post-rock masters such as Mogwai and Sigur Rós but leader singer Ben’s distinctive vocals set them apart. Well, apart from having the best band name I have ever heard.

Penguins Kill Polar Bears’ first EP Dawn was released in June 2010 to critical acclaim and the follow up release Vessels and Veins was release on March 22nd, 2011. This is powerful, emotional and dramatic music and is the type of EP that makes you want to play it over and over again until the band release a full-length album. Luckily, the band are planning a full album release later in the year but in the meantime, they are offering two free downloads to promote the release of the EP Vessels and Veins:

The entire EP is up for a limited time on Spinner’s Listening Party but I would honestly say that this one is a keeper and well worth the purchase.”

Thanks for a great review! Read it “here”:http://emm-media.blogspot.com/2011/03/penguins-kill-polar-bears-offer-free.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+EmmMedia+%28Addicted+to+Media%29&utm_content=Twitter

Absolute Punk reviews Penguins Kill Polar Bears

Our new friends at Absolute Punk weigh in with a stellar review. Check it out, read the comments, and chime in!

“With the release of their second EP; Scottish rock outfit, Penguins Kill Polar Bears offer us six songs that are all miniature behemoths in their own right. Each song creates climactic moments of crushing sound with spacey melodies woven inside them. It’s what you would expect from a band that call themselves ‘loud vocal post rock’ – this could not be closer to the truth. Sticking to their self appraisal, they sweep through their songs effortlessly with beautifully orchestrated instrumentation. The quieter and less heavy sections are composed and collected before seamlessly unleashing into another monument of sound.

Vocally the album was a grower for me. This might have been down to the instrumentation being more akin to it being exactly that; instrumental. Nevertheless, vocalist Ben Proudlock stamps his own unique brand into the proceedings. Slightly quirky (might have to do with the accent, think a slightly more nasal Simon Neil of Biffy Clyro in their earlier days. It’s maybe an easy comparison and stereotype but it’s the best I can offer) but fitting. Most notable is that the vocals almost act as an extra instrument. What I mean is that he does not distract you from the music; where as you may feel inclined with other bands to listen in a different way to catch what the lyrics are or what the vocal melodies are…you do not get that urge on Vessels & Veins. Everything blends together.

The weak link on the album is the production. Where as the vocals sound crisp and proper the instrumentation makes you feel like you are watching them live but from a considerable distance. There is an ‘under the water’ effect which is a shame as you feel that many of the melodies and texturing are somewhat muddy. This is perhaps deliberate, but with such atmospheric melodies you cannot help but wish the quality was a little better.

I admit that I was surprised by this EP. It came out of nowhere for me and I had never heard of them before. That is definitely a thing of the past as they have a new fan and I will eagerly be waiting for more material (with better production).

-Alex Djaferis”

Check the link “here”:http://www.absolutepunk.net/showthread.php?p=86930872#post86930872

Coming Soon: “Fret Sounds!”

This summer will mark the new full-length release from the band _The Big Takeover_ described as “pummelling, heavy duty power-pop.” _Fret Sounds_, the fourth release from Hoboken’s *Stuyvesant*, is set for a June release on CD and digital download. Look for “St. Cloud,” the album’s first single, next month!

Penguins Kill Polar Bears Listening Party!

Hey everyone, AOL Spinner has been kind enough to feature the debut EP *Penguins Kill Polar Bears* on this week’s Listening Party.

You can hear the CD in its entirety, for free, at “this address”:http://www.spinner.com/new-releases#/9 or by visiting Spinner.com

And don’t forget you can preorder it right here, or at Amazon.com!

The street date is March 22 – listen and enjoy!

The Line of Best Fit reviews “Vessels & Veins”

Check out this fantastic review of “Vessels & Veins” from *The Line of Best Fit*:

“It’s a long way down if you look over the edge of the post-rock precipice … do you remember the first time? For me, it was in 2000, with Godspeed You! Black Emperor’s sophomore Lift Your Skinny Fists Like Antennas To Heaven, perhaps post-rock’s defining moment? The epic ‘Sleep’ medley laid down the tracks the rest of the genre has run on ever since. And there’s something about the remoteness of places like the Scottish Highlands which inspires music of such vast and explosive soundscapes. Perhaps a stormy boat trip on Loch Lomond, or the bleak wilderness that is Glen Coe and its harsh surroundings, or the ‘sudden-death’ angular sandstone shafts of Liatharc Mountain further west, all of these might convince you that remote beauty can be soundtracked by a music that hangs in the air longer than it should, a sound explored by bands like Mogwai, Glasvegas, Idlewild, Biffy Clyro. OK, maybe VisitScotland didn’t make the connection between reverb-laden guitar riffs and rugged landscapes, but Linlithgow-based band Penguins Kill Polar Bears are very much from the recent groundswell of Scottish post-rock, a trail blazed bands like Aereogramme and Aberdeen’s noise rock combo Xcerts. Penguins Kill Polar Bears’s current taster EP Vessels & Veins is a nice forerunner to their debut album due for release later this year.

The opening chords to ‘Lungs’ could be something from Echo And The Bunnymen’s icy 80s Porcupine period before quickly crashing into classic full-on post-rock riff heaven. Singer Ben Proudlock’s voice is rich with dreamy imagery and scotch roar, although quite hard to make out: lungs and being at war? Jesus in some strange modern incarnation? And the song winds up with a heavy marching chant! There is a view, of course, that post-rock lyrics aren’t meant to be understood, more imbibed like a good whisky. But singer and band steer their vessel away from remoter parts towards more conventional anthemic rock territory, something like Glasvegas’ eponymous debut of three years ago. It’s an explosive beginning and leads nicely into ‘Wish With Worry’, slower and more reflective and a vocal of delirious memories. Proudlock rakes over the wild abandon of youth as the band again raise the tempo to crescendo, leaving the spine tingling with energy by the end. Music for fresh young hearts and minds, it’s all been done before of course, but delivered with a heartfelt honesty hard to view with a cynical eye, so with little persuasion the listener is convinced. Next up, ‘Between The Tide’ also builds into a great crashing wall of guitar reverb, but with impassioned vocals giving it the platform to take off from before the band ply their craft and bring the song to dramatic climax. Finally, ‘Something Old’ brings the mood down gently before raising it up again, drawing us into its slow-burning core. The explosive climax initially begs us enough patience to promise “all good things to those that wait”. Post-rock may or may not have been a reaction to the indie rock and new wave of the 90s, but it’s certainly a tonic in the modern musical medical cabinet: if you are feeling a little weary, on Vessels & Veins you can take 4 doses daily after ingesting your genre.

So these songs should get the pulse racing again, particularly an old ticker like myself, and if they do verge on the side of musical prescription occasionally, it’s definitely just what the doctor ordered. Yes, on Veins & Vessels, Penguins Kill Polar Bears are giving people a little more of what they want: music primed with the spark of youthful energy that lead us over the edge of post-rock’s delightful precipice in the first place.”

Read the review “here”:http://www.thelineofbestfit.com/2011/03/penguins-kill-polar-bears-vessels-veins-ep-2/

Mommyheads Spring 2011 Tour!

The Mommyheads have launched their 2011 tour of Scandinavia!

Fans, check out these dates, and do your best to catch them when they’re close by.

March 12: Alakerta, Helsinki, Finland
March 13: Klubi, Turku, Finland
March 15: Debaser, Stockholm, Sweden
March 16: Smalands Nation, Lund, Sweden
March 17: Jazzhuset, Goteburg, Sweden
March 18: Studenterhuset Cophenagen, Cophenhagen, Denmark
March 19: Bongo Bar, Jonkoping, SE
March 20: White Trash Fast Food, Berlin, Germany
March 21: Logo, Hamburg, Germany
March 23: Garage Bergen, Bergen
March 24: Revolver Oslo, Oslo, Norway
March 25: Club Helmer, Helmer, Sweden
March 26: Sigurdsgaten 25, Vasteras, Sweden

This is not a band to miss!