
Neo Neos: Kill Someone You Hate 12" (new)
Across numerous micro-projects, the home-recorded mania of Minnesotaâs Msr. Connie Voltaire centers on punk smeared with smarty-pants petulance and uncontrollable âproblem childâ id. As Neo Neos, Voltaireâs most prolific and formidable alter ego, the line between clenched detractor and doe-eyed convert get blurrier with each new dispatch. The kind of sensory-overload gunk that Voltaire specializes in is obviously maddening, but it can be gripping as well. Could a Neo Neos album offer up any substantive answers?
In a devilish con, much of NNâs glory stems from its bizzaro-brilliant critique of the freak scene, recasting todayâs âtweener punk/wave/HC as truly haphazard noise, a messy no-fi babel employing near-edgelord levels of antagonism and bedlam. Terms like âblown outâ or âcacophonousâ or even âmuttonheadedâ barely begin cover Voltaireâs strike, yet raving hooks are discernible amid the chaos. The whole trick-bag is inverted as well, with rhythm and bass throb being more prevalent than any requisite guitar screwing. Hell, the album opens with a galling instrumental that somehow serves as a nose-thumbing dissection of modern-day punk tropes, a theme carried throughout the program, always guided by Voltaireâs spasms and helium yowl.
Neck Chop is pleased to publish Neo Neosâ newest news as part of our year-end operations. Jucy Lucy not included. - Mitch Cardwell
Our take: Latest release, and the first on 12â, from this project. Neo Neos are punk maximalists with minimal production values, pounding out track after track of loose and cacophonous racket. Kill Someone You Hatefeatures a whopping 22 tracks, and itâs a total information overload in much the same way that the second Liquids LP (Hot Liqs Revenge, also on Neck Chop) was. As Iâm listening, thereâs plenty to get excited about in the gurgling cauldron of noise and feedback, but by the time Iâve played both sides of Kill Someone You Hate I feel like Iâve just binge-watched an entire season of Itâs Always Sunny in Philadelphia⊠my reference points are skewed and my world is no longer my own. I realize I havenât given you any impression what this record sounds like, but itâs less about the sound and more about the experience, so if you arenât willing to go on the whole epic journey with Neo Neos itâs probably best you stay home.
Across numerous micro-projects, the home-recorded mania of Minnesotaâs Msr. Connie Voltaire centers on punk smeared with smarty-pants petulance and uncontrollable âproblem childâ id. As Neo Neos, Voltaireâs most prolific and formidable alter ego, the line between clenched detractor and doe-eyed convert get blurrier with each new dispatch. The kind of sensory-overload gunk that Voltaire specializes in is obviously maddening, but it can be gripping as well. Could a Neo Neos album offer up any substantive answers?
In a devilish con, much of NNâs glory stems from its bizzaro-brilliant critique of the freak scene, recasting todayâs âtweener punk/wave/HC as truly haphazard noise, a messy no-fi babel employing near-edgelord levels of antagonism and bedlam. Terms like âblown outâ or âcacophonousâ or even âmuttonheadedâ barely begin cover Voltaireâs strike, yet raving hooks are discernible amid the chaos. The whole trick-bag is inverted as well, with rhythm and bass throb being more prevalent than any requisite guitar screwing. Hell, the album opens with a galling instrumental that somehow serves as a nose-thumbing dissection of modern-day punk tropes, a theme carried throughout the program, always guided by Voltaireâs spasms and helium yowl.
Neck Chop is pleased to publish Neo Neosâ newest news as part of our year-end operations. Jucy Lucy not included. - Mitch Cardwell
Our take: Latest release, and the first on 12â, from this project. Neo Neos are punk maximalists with minimal production values, pounding out track after track of loose and cacophonous racket. Kill Someone You Hatefeatures a whopping 22 tracks, and itâs a total information overload in much the same way that the second Liquids LP (Hot Liqs Revenge, also on Neck Chop) was. As Iâm listening, thereâs plenty to get excited about in the gurgling cauldron of noise and feedback, but by the time Iâve played both sides of Kill Someone You Hate I feel like Iâve just binge-watched an entire season of Itâs Always Sunny in Philadelphia⊠my reference points are skewed and my world is no longer my own. I realize I havenât given you any impression what this record sounds like, but itâs less about the sound and more about the experience, so if you arenât willing to go on the whole epic journey with Neo Neos itâs probably best you stay home.
Original: $2,000.00
-70%$2,000.00
$600.00Description
Across numerous micro-projects, the home-recorded mania of Minnesotaâs Msr. Connie Voltaire centers on punk smeared with smarty-pants petulance and uncontrollable âproblem childâ id. As Neo Neos, Voltaireâs most prolific and formidable alter ego, the line between clenched detractor and doe-eyed convert get blurrier with each new dispatch. The kind of sensory-overload gunk that Voltaire specializes in is obviously maddening, but it can be gripping as well. Could a Neo Neos album offer up any substantive answers?
In a devilish con, much of NNâs glory stems from its bizzaro-brilliant critique of the freak scene, recasting todayâs âtweener punk/wave/HC as truly haphazard noise, a messy no-fi babel employing near-edgelord levels of antagonism and bedlam. Terms like âblown outâ or âcacophonousâ or even âmuttonheadedâ barely begin cover Voltaireâs strike, yet raving hooks are discernible amid the chaos. The whole trick-bag is inverted as well, with rhythm and bass throb being more prevalent than any requisite guitar screwing. Hell, the album opens with a galling instrumental that somehow serves as a nose-thumbing dissection of modern-day punk tropes, a theme carried throughout the program, always guided by Voltaireâs spasms and helium yowl.
Neck Chop is pleased to publish Neo Neosâ newest news as part of our year-end operations. Jucy Lucy not included. - Mitch Cardwell
Our take: Latest release, and the first on 12â, from this project. Neo Neos are punk maximalists with minimal production values, pounding out track after track of loose and cacophonous racket. Kill Someone You Hatefeatures a whopping 22 tracks, and itâs a total information overload in much the same way that the second Liquids LP (Hot Liqs Revenge, also on Neck Chop) was. As Iâm listening, thereâs plenty to get excited about in the gurgling cauldron of noise and feedback, but by the time Iâve played both sides of Kill Someone You Hate I feel like Iâve just binge-watched an entire season of Itâs Always Sunny in Philadelphia⊠my reference points are skewed and my world is no longer my own. I realize I havenât given you any impression what this record sounds like, but itâs less about the sound and more about the experience, so if you arenât willing to go on the whole epic journey with Neo Neos itâs probably best you stay home.












