Artikel
PLASMA
Mua Et Voi Omistaa
LP
Sorry State is proud to present Mua Et Voi Omistaa, the debut vinyl from Helsinki, Finlands Plasma, released in partnership with Nunchakapunk Records in Finland and Little Jans Hammer Records in Spain. Plasma carries forward the power, ferocity, and craftsmanship that has been Finnish punks calling card since the genres inception, fusing it with the bouncy energy and razor-sharp execution of modern hardcore punk. Songs like Mata Pilvilinna, Satkynukke, and Mua Et Voi Omistaa are full-bore, punk-as-fuck attacks, but the intensity belies how dialed-in everything is: the insanely catchy bass lines, the way the drummer perfectly balances building tension with eruptions of energy, the guitarists furious downpicking, and the vocalists ability to weave melody into a confrontational punk snarl. Meeting the high bar for musicianship set by contemporary Finnish groups like Kohti Tuhoa, Yleiset Syyt, and Foreseen, Plasma really shines on uptempo mid-tempo songs like Ei Oikeutta and Syvemmalle Sisaan that evoke (and will surely inspire) heaving masses of writhing, sweaty punk bodies. For what seems on the surface like a monolithic blast of punk fury, Mua Et Voi Omistaa is a varied, layered masterpiece of hardcore craftsmanship that sinks its hooks in quickly and refuses to let go.
Mua Et Voi Omistaa
LP
19,90 Euro
in den Warenkorb
in den Warenkorb
Sorry State is proud to present Mua Et Voi Omistaa, the debut vinyl from Helsinki, Finlands Plasma, released in partnership with Nunchakapunk Records in Finland and Little Jans Hammer Records in Spain. Plasma carries forward the power, ferocity, and craftsmanship that has been Finnish punks calling card since the genres inception, fusing it with the bouncy energy and razor-sharp execution of modern hardcore punk. Songs like Mata Pilvilinna, Satkynukke, and Mua Et Voi Omistaa are full-bore, punk-as-fuck attacks, but the intensity belies how dialed-in everything is: the insanely catchy bass lines, the way the drummer perfectly balances building tension with eruptions of energy, the guitarists furious downpicking, and the vocalists ability to weave melody into a confrontational punk snarl. Meeting the high bar for musicianship set by contemporary Finnish groups like Kohti Tuhoa, Yleiset Syyt, and Foreseen, Plasma really shines on uptempo mid-tempo songs like Ei Oikeutta and Syvemmalle Sisaan that evoke (and will surely inspire) heaving masses of writhing, sweaty punk bodies. For what seems on the surface like a monolithic blast of punk fury, Mua Et Voi Omistaa is a varied, layered masterpiece of hardcore craftsmanship that sinks its hooks in quickly and refuses to let go.





