
Pictured: Cover Artwork for ‘Comfort To Me’ (LP) (Released on September 10th, 2021) (via Rough Trade Records)
Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and, as you’ve probably figured out by now, it is my time to deliver yet another daily track on the blog to your eye line, since it has always been my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Amyl & The Sniffers are an Australian Pub Rock group who aren’t necessarily changing the face of Rock ‘N’ Roll, but they are certainly sticking out a middle finger to the watered down imitations of that genre in the current mainstream Pop/Rock market. Led by vocalist/songwriter Amy Taylor – the band also consists of drummer Bryce Wilson, bassist Fergus Romer and rhythm guitarist Dec Martens – and they have been gaining popularity with Garage Rock and Punk Rock fans since the release of their self-titled debut studio album in 2019, which scooped up the ‘Best Rock Album’ award at the ARIA Music Awards of that year. You might have also heard Amy Taylor on a track – ‘Nudge’ – from Sleaford Mods’ latest album ‘Spare Ribs’ that was released back in January of this year. More commercial and critical success has followed with ‘Comfort To Me’, the band’s follow-up album, which was released on September 10th on ATO Records and Rough Trade Records. It was written while the band were quarantined together during the Covid-19 pandemic and the 13-song track listing was lyrically inspired by Taylor’s Hip-Hop heroes and the countless DIY Post-Punk bands that have existed throughout the decades. It feels like a love letter to old-school Hard Rock, Post Hardcore and Psych-Rock bands, as they build a reputation of becoming Australia’s leading export since AC/DC. Check out ‘Guided By Angels’ below.
Offering her personal insight on Amyl & The Sniffers’ latest album ‘Comfort To Me’, frontwoman Amy Taylor says “The nihilistic, live in the moment, positivity and panel beater rock-meets-shed show punk was still there, but it was better” when telling Stereogum about the pandemic-era production process of the group by churning out some eccentric rhythms for exhilarating new material in the middle of global turmoil, she added, “The whole thing was less spontaneous and more darkly considered”, making it seem evident that recent events forced the 4-piece to really sit and take their time with the new output and focus more on their craft due to the pandemic. It never really sounds like a ‘Quarantine’ themed record, however, and certainly not so on ‘Guided By Angels’, a very propulsive old-school Punk anthem with a ‘No Frills’ personality. Driven by some thunderous guitar riffs and cathartic Drum sections, Taylor chants lyrics like “It’s my currency/I spend, protect my energy, currency” and “I never hold on/To the misery or grief” to a delicately stilted delivery, and there’s certainly a distinct Post-Punk edge to the instrumentation. Some usage of the Wammy Bar on the bass guitar creeps into the late stretch towards the end to add a wonky feel to the rhythms, and the rhythm guitar riffs have a cathartic, amped-up style that sets all of the band’s usual blueprints of a retro Punk Rock aesthetic and an explosive Pub Rock revivalist notion into place, but they seem to be structured a little differently than before because, although Taylor still seems possessed by a familiar sense of whining or longing in her voice, it is instead making a point of self-realization and refining her songwriting more neatly in comparison to the band’s previous releases in the form of LP’s and EP’s. For example, lyrical sequences like “Good energy and bad energy/I’ve got plenty of energy/It’s my currency” implies the idea that all sorts of contrasting emotions, and sometimes undescribed feelings, can all co-exist at once in her mental space. Overall, ‘Guided By Angels’ was a lot of fun as always by Amyl & The Sniffers, and the wise lyricism feels like a natural evolution of the chaotic lyricism the retro-leaning group have previously explored. Good, old-fashioned Punk.

Pictured: Amy Taylor (Lead Vocals/Chief Songwriter/Rhythm Guitar), Dec Martens (Lead Guitar), Fergus Romer (Bass Guitar/Backing Vocals) and Bryce Wilson (Drums) (2019) (Photo by Charles Engelken)
That’s it for now! Don’t forget to check out the first episode of my new podcast, ‘The Subculture Sessions’, on Spotify and thank you for your support with both projects. It is ‘New Album Release Fridays’ tomorrow and, this time, we’re browsing the details of a new album from a slightly lesser-known artist, which is the Indie Folk project of a Chicago-based songwriter who opened for Death Cab For Cutie on their summer tour in the US of 2019, and she performed at the Pitchfork Music Festival in 2019. She also collaborated with Yoni Wolf (from the Alternative Hip-Hop group WHY?) on ‘Siren 042’.
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