• Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • RSS
June 5, Friday, 2026
  • Login
CELEBRITY LAND!
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
Celebrity Land
No Result
View All Result
Home Music

New Music | Friday Roll Out: VIA, Factor Chandelier

Story Center by Story Center
November 28, 2025
Reading Time: 4 mins read
0
New Music | Friday Roll Out: VIA, Factor Chandelier

RELATED POSTS

Infinity Song Announces New Self-Titled Album

Bethel Music’s Jordan Colle Encourages Believers to Trust God’s Timing on New Single ‘Headed My Way’

Marilyn Manson Loses Bid to Toss Ex-Assistant’s Sex Assault Lawsuit

While I could spend time on this record, I’m thinking about what Chris Brokaw (Come, Codeine) has gone on record saying, that this is some of the best music Thalia Zedek has ever recorded. I’ve always been a staunch Come fan so I’d have to disagree. But Via (Dromedary Records), an early band by both guitarists Zedek and Jerry di Rienzo (Cell), originally recorded these songs back in 1987, along with J.A. on bass, drummer Adam Gaynor, and Phil Milstein. While I’ve listened to Zedek’s previous works in Uzi and Live Skull (releases lost in the fire that was my early life), Via does stand out through just six songs. Hints of the blues permeate through “JJ” as the dual guitars sputter in, but then find the rhythm they’re able to sink their teeth in as Zedek allows her voice, swelling in reverb, to linger around the song’s atmosphere. The song itself is loose and inviting, nothing is forced, yet everything seems so delicately pieced together. But it’s the driving force of “1,000 MPH” that fascinates me. The wall of guitars seems almost out of tune, although you realize this is purposeful and deliberate as they seemingly offer dissonance without being dissonant. Post-punk at its best and as soon as it starts, it quickly ends. The band was sometimes experimental here, and listening to “Way You Say You Feel” holds much credence. The band raucously clashes against one another before upending the track, creating an unearthly structure but with an underlying melody.

FACTOR CHANDELIER – AS DARK AS TODAY

As we close in on the end of the year, everything is wrapped up neatly in pretty packages without any semblance of real depth. The holidays bring out the petrified smiles and false niceties people are fearful of showing throughout the rest of the year. Everything is bland, and new music is replaced by Christmas standards that put everyone in a repetitive motion, consuming lattes while shopping for everything you don’t need. But this isn’t really about the holiday,s but something much more vital and robust.

Canada’s own Factor Chandelier returns with a new full-length release, As Dark As Today (Fake Four Inc.). With well over fifty full-length releases to his credit, either solo or collaborative, Factor continues to ride the wave of his sonic sculptures. The new release follows 2023’s Cold, Cold World, but he hasn’t been sitting on his laurels, producing material for a variety of artists. But as usual, I digress. We’re here to talk about the 12 tracks on As Dark As Today, an instrumental release that doesn’t take a well-worn path; instead, Factor keeps his wide-eyed vision expansive, moving in varying directions. What stands apart from the rest is probably “Lose Our Way” with a voice singing over its loose free-jazz like drumming & percussion. Halfway through, the song moves a different way as the song drifts away and then enters again with gentle guitar notes, subtle vocal backdrops, and rhythmic percussion. I keep reflecting back on this one, two pieces of a puzzle, at just over a minute. But the release seems to be as cloudy as the album title suggests, as it opens with “Apollo Five,” a dreary and somber composition that comes across cold but not calculated. It flows with a repetitive bassline that lingers over an energetic rhythm, and imagining hands flowing all across a drum set isn’t far removed. It’s cold but concise, along with the underlying keyboard that keeps the flow steady. While “Leave The City” might have the same emotional tactfulness, it seems there’s so much more to sink your teeth into. Its thick bassline is meaty, and the percussion seems to fill in as its base flavoring while the repeated vocals add coloring. But it’s when the guitars enter the fray that’s when you know you have a complete meal in front of you, bursting with distortion while also capitalizing on the melody of the song. Seems different but completely fulfilling.

Factor gives us just enough to enjoy, never allowing a song to drag on and out. It’s like that with “Don’t Bother Me” as looped guitar samples hold onto your attention from start to finish over an infectious rhythm at just over two and a half minutes. Every time I’ve listened to this though, I always seem to circle back to “Four Fifteen Pt. 2 Don’t Give Up.” The bouncy rhythm is what has me coming around again and again, and the repeated lyrics, “Don’t give up, don’t give up, baby,” have me singing along with it. I won’t front, though. I did go searching for a ‘Pt. 1’ but who knows if it actually exists. The rhythm here is fun, and its energy seems unmatched. Songs vary throughout As Dark As Today as “A Thousand Wrongs” moves back into that same subtle somberness found earlier in the album. The shadowy tones of guitars, coupled with female vocals rallying around it, seem to wallow in a sweet despair. It’s not the only thing Factor focuses on here because his sound moves into directions I’m always fascinated with. A number of tracks here, like “Never The Same Again” and even “Too Soon,” you can imagine filling in the backdrop of movie soundtracks. But referencing films with the likes of Richard Roundtree, Fred Williamson, Ron O’Neal, or Pam Grier. Yeah, these would be fitting.

While Factor Chandelier may stay busy with his production & engineering work, he’s found time to release this new album filled with drama and emotion. The love of the art is still apparent with every track on As Dark As Today.

ADVERTISEMENT

‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’

‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source ghettoblastermagazine.com ’

Story Center

Story Center

Related Posts

Infinity Song INFINITY SONG
Music

Infinity Song Announces New Self-Titled Album

June 5, 2026
Bethel Music’s Jordan Colle Encourages Believers to Trust God’s Timing on New Single ‘Headed My Way’
Music

Bethel Music’s Jordan Colle Encourages Believers to Trust God’s Timing on New Single ‘Headed My Way’

June 5, 2026
Marilyn Manson Loses Bid to Toss Ex-Assistant’s Sex Assault Lawsuit
Music

Marilyn Manson Loses Bid to Toss Ex-Assistant’s Sex Assault Lawsuit

June 5, 2026
Government of Canada wordmark
Music

This Week’s New Tours, Including Sara Bareilles, Violet Grohl and William Prince: June 5, 2026 │ Exclaim!

June 5, 2026
Met Museum’s ‘Musical Bodies’ Blurs Humans and Instruments
Music

Met Museum’s ‘Musical Bodies’ Blurs Humans and Instruments

June 5, 2026
Trump reveals Freedom 250 rally lineup with Lee Greenwood, himself
Music

Trump reveals Freedom 250 rally lineup with Lee Greenwood, himself

June 5, 2026
Next Post
Who's favourite to win I'm A Celebrity 2025? Latest odds revealed

Who's favourite to win I'm A Celebrity 2025? Latest odds revealed

Ando San - Thick Neck (Official Video) - YouTube

Nov 2025 Editors’ Picks: the best new guitar music

Recommended Stories

Atlus joins BBR Music Group/BMG Nashville & releases new single 'Devil Ain’t Done'

Atlus joins BBR Music Group/BMG Nashville & releases new single ‘Devil Ain’t Done’

August 15, 2025
Mike D has shared ‘Switch Up’, the first new music from a Beastie Boys member in 15 years

Mike D has shared ‘Switch Up’, the first new music from a Beastie Boys member in 15 years

May 8, 2026
David Bowie’s 1997 Union Jack frock coat, designed with Alexander McQueen, displayed at the new David Bowie Centre at London’s V&A East Storehouse

London’s David Bowie Centre to open with 200 treasures from a 90,000-item archive

September 12, 2025
Plugin Install : Popular Post Widget need JNews - View Counter to be installed

Ads

ADVERTISEMENT

Recent News

My fav artist turned to AI :(

My fav artist turned to AI :(

June 5, 2026
Infinity Song INFINITY SONG

Infinity Song Announces New Self-Titled Album

June 5, 2026
Lady Pamela Hicks, Queen's former lady-in-waiting, dies aged 97

Lady Pamela Hicks, Queen’s former lady-in-waiting, dies aged 97

June 5, 2026

Categories

  • Artists
  • Celebrities
  • Entertainment
  • Gossip
  • Horoscopes
  • Music
  • Royalty
  • Videos

Contact Us

  • Privacy & Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA Compliance
  • Terms and Conditions

© 2020 Celebrity.Land

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty

© 2020 Celebrity.Land