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Paprika: Smoked cassette
Our take: Paprikaâs 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 Paprikaâs recent tour. I was a big fan of Paprikaâs 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 doesnât 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 Paprikaâs secret weapon is how they arrange their songs. Theyâre 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 Buzzcocksâ âYou Tear Me Up,â known to nerds the world over as the first d-beat song. Excellent stuff.
Our take: Paprikaâs 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 Paprikaâs recent tour. I was a big fan of Paprikaâs 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 doesnât 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 Paprikaâs secret weapon is how they arrange their songs. Theyâre 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 Buzzcocksâ âYou Tear Me Up,â known to nerds the world over as the first d-beat song. Excellent stuff.
$1,200.00
Paprika: Smoked cassetteâ
$1,200.00
Description
Our take: Paprikaâs 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 Paprikaâs recent tour. I was a big fan of Paprikaâs 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 doesnât 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 Paprikaâs secret weapon is how they arrange their songs. Theyâre 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 Buzzcocksâ âYou Tear Me Up,â known to nerds the world over as the first d-beat song. Excellent stuff.












