HomeStore

Paprika: Smoked cassette

Product image 1

Paprika: Smoked cassette



Our take: Paprika’s first cassette came out on Iron Lung, but this new tape is the first release on a new label called Chaos and Chill, released for Paprika’s recent tour. I was a big fan of Paprika’s first tape, and Smoked rips too. While Paprika sounds like a hardcore band of the 2020s, the elements of their sound come together in a way that doesn’t sound like anyone else. Their riffs are nimble and catchy, but the guitar tone is a biting and mid-range-y, more like a death metal tone than a typical hardcore punk sound. The vocalist has a snotty bark that commands the room, but I think Paprika’s secret weapon is how they arrange their songs. They’re full of catchy stops and starts and dynamic accents that keep the energy level sky-high. After three originals, they finish up with a cover of the Buzzcocks’ “You Tear Me Up,” known to nerds the world over as the first d-beat song. Excellent stuff.


Our take: Paprika’s first cassette came out on Iron Lung, but this new tape is the first release on a new label called Chaos and Chill, released for Paprika’s recent tour. I was a big fan of Paprika’s first tape, and Smoked rips too. While Paprika sounds like a hardcore band of the 2020s, the elements of their sound come together in a way that doesn’t sound like anyone else. Their riffs are nimble and catchy, but the guitar tone is a biting and mid-range-y, more like a death metal tone than a typical hardcore punk sound. The vocalist has a snotty bark that commands the room, but I think Paprika’s secret weapon is how they arrange their songs. They’re full of catchy stops and starts and dynamic accents that keep the energy level sky-high. After three originals, they finish up with a cover of the Buzzcocks’ “You Tear Me Up,” known to nerds the world over as the first d-beat song. Excellent stuff.
$6.95
Paprika: Smoked cassette
$6.95

Description



Our take: Paprika’s first cassette came out on Iron Lung, but this new tape is the first release on a new label called Chaos and Chill, released for Paprika’s recent tour. I was a big fan of Paprika’s first tape, and Smoked rips too. While Paprika sounds like a hardcore band of the 2020s, the elements of their sound come together in a way that doesn’t sound like anyone else. Their riffs are nimble and catchy, but the guitar tone is a biting and mid-range-y, more like a death metal tone than a typical hardcore punk sound. The vocalist has a snotty bark that commands the room, but I think Paprika’s secret weapon is how they arrange their songs. They’re full of catchy stops and starts and dynamic accents that keep the energy level sky-high. After three originals, they finish up with a cover of the Buzzcocks’ “You Tear Me Up,” known to nerds the world over as the first d-beat song. Excellent stuff.

You may also like

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Action Swingers: Decimation Blvd. 12"

$15.00

$4.50

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Amulet: The First 12"

$30.00

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Ash Borer: Bloodlands 12"

$25.00

$7.50

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Jess And The Ancient Ones: S/T 12"

$35.00

$10.50

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Allegiance: Overlooked 12"

$20.00

$6.00

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Sanction: Broken In Refraction 12"

$15.00

$4.50

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Kraanium: Slamchosis 12"

$15.00

$4.50

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Eximperituserqethhzebib_iptugakkath_ulweliarzaxu_u: Absorbing Evil.. 12"

$15.00

$4.50

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Wolves In The Throne Room: BBC Session Anno Domini 12"

$15.00

$4.50

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Listener: Wooden Heart 12"

$20.00

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Action Swingers: Complete London Toe Rag Session 12"

$12.00

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Burning//World: Peace Is No Reality 12"

$20.00