Skip to content

ABC Tool

  • Home
  • About / Contect
    • PRIVACY POLICY
Ashnymph’s Childhood EP is exhilarating dance goth rock

Ashnymph’s Childhood EP is exhilarating dance goth rock

Posted on May 10, 2026 By safdargal12 No Comments on Ashnymph’s Childhood EP is exhilarating dance goth rock
Blog


I’ve got to thank my oldest friend and concert buddy, Tim, for turning me on to this one. Ashnymph is a London band that blends post-punk melodies with Krautrock rhythms and industrial grime. Their debut EP, Childhood, drifts between dreamy vocals buried in layers of reverb and four-on-the-floor dancefloor pounding. It’s a thrilling opening salvo from a band that feels on the cusp of a major breakthrough.

Childhood opens with an ambient recording of someone walking down a hall (I think), and some swirling synth noise before the first song, “Island in the Sky” kicks off properly with a motorik beat and bass throb. The thin, digitally manipulated vocals and robotic groove punctuated with bursts of noise, but the big chords of the chorus bring to mind Black Rebel Motorcycle Club’s “Whatever Happened to My Rock and Roll.”

“Saltspreader,” the band’s first single, is next. It launches with a deep metallic grind splattered by clanking percussion and drum hits, before a soft synth arpeggio brings some melody to the party. In the back half, there are deeply chorused vocals that ooze ‘80s goth, driving guitar, and a disco stomp. Despite its slow build, it’s clear why the band chose this as their first single. It’s dark, dancey, and an absolute earworm.

“After Glow” leans even further into ‘80 fetishism, recalling Depeche Mode and early Ministry, before Al Jourgensen discovered guitars. “47” marries industrial beats with chipmunk vocals and off-kilter guitars in the vein of No Wave acts like Swans. But the last-minute switch to a half-time groove removes the more abrasive layers, letting the beauty of the guitar melody shine through while ethereal vocals float over the top.

The last track, “Mr. Invisible,” is possibly the most experimental of the bunch. It’s more explicitly electronic than the rest, relying on heavily manipulated samples, indecipherable vocals, and a relentless bass thump for the first chunk. Eventually, clearer vocal melodies and circular guitar lines play off the polyrhythmic synths. The whole thing is disorienting, dizzying, and exhilarating. It ends somewhat abruptly on a lopsided guitar groove and an echoed vocal, leaving me wanting more. So much more.



Source link

Post Views: 7

Post navigation

❮ Previous Post: Uber has always wanted to be more than a ride; now it has reason to hurry
Next Post: Incident Report: CVE-2024-YIKES | Andrew Nesbitt ❯

You may also like

The Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra can’t beat this 2025 Android phone
Blog
The Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra can’t beat this 2025 Android phone
April 19, 2026
Sony’s New AI Robot Can Probably Beat You in Table Tennis
Blog
Sony’s New AI Robot Can Probably Beat You in Table Tennis
April 23, 2026
Mindtrip’s AI Flight Agent Wants to Solve the Messy Travel Plans Search Engines Can’t
Blog
Mindtrip’s AI Flight Agent Wants to Solve the Messy Travel Plans Search Engines Can’t
May 6, 2026
AddyOsmani.com – Agentic Engineering
Blog
AddyOsmani.com – Agentic Engineering
May 8, 2026

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • Another report confirms July 22 for Samsung's next Unpacked launch event
  • Google confirms new laptops are still coming
  • Trump Phone Will Finally Ship This Week, CEO Says
  • FCC angers small carriers by helping AT&T and Starlink buy EchoStar spectrum
  • The Other Half of AI Safety

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Archives

  • May 2026
  • April 2026

Categories

  • Blog

Copyright © 2026 ABC Tool.

Theme: Oceanly News by ScriptsTown