Location: Melbourne
Country: Australia
Genre: Punk, rock
Full length: Cartoon Darkness
Format: Digital album
Label: B2B Records
Release date: October 25, 2024
Naming themselves after the Australian term for poppers, and comparing themselves to the thirty-second effect it has on you when taking it, Amyl and the Sniffers have won three of nine Aria Award nominations. Not too shabby for a pub rock band that released two EPs and three albums since 2019.
You mat=y say it’s the band's capacity to encompass punk, proto punk, post-punk, rock and inspiration from Cardi B and Dolly Parton that got them favorable press in Australia, but it’s just as likely it was their causing a stir by channeling their inspiration through loud, raw guitars and the irascible cockiness punk became known for in its inception. Sharing the stage with high profile artists like Weezer, Green Day, Smashing Pumpkins, Jane's Addiction, Foo Fighters and AC/DC didn’t hurt either.
On “Cartoon Darkness” Amyl and the Sniffers bristle at and reject preconceptions of punk, daring you to judge them, waiting to call bullshit with as much scorn as you yourself laid out. Lead vocalist Amy Taylor’s seething umbrage and displeasure oozes through her lyrics like molasses. Her approach to girl power is infused with enough baleful menace to give you a headache like a post-popper experience.
That being said, do I think they're selling out or becoming posers because their raw, scratchy guitars and sharply accented Australian vocals are receiving more aboveground notice? Probably not, considering they still seem to have their pub rock/street punk attitude, they've reached their mainstream success by their own merit and more people are exposed to the fresh viewpoint they bring to their work. Like punk was in the 70s, they're about being themselves and not being restricted on either end of the spectrum.
The band usually concentrates on feminism and personal issues, but according to an interview they did at Triple J in 2024, “Cartoon Darkness” is externalized and focused on comprehending the world around them. Taylor, an imposing frontwoman, injects melody and personality into her message about what's considered proper societal behavior. The band is inevitably bound to piss people off, not because of rude dispositions but because of their rejection of traditional standards set below and aboveground.
People dislike being trolled and/or body shamed online, and this is an issue Taylor unrepentantly speaks out about. Rather than feel obligated to appease those who criticize from behind screen names, Taylor defines herself on her terms. The promotional video Amyl and the Sniffers made for "Jerkin'" (linked below) in 2024 is about empowerment, not gratuitous nudity. The band and people they know are shown as accepting themselves as they are, despite not having perfect bodies seen on "Baywatch."
Knowing each other and growing together over the years has made Amyl and the Sniffers comfortable working as a unit and diversifying under the umbrella of raw grit and energy. As you listen to "Cartoon Darkness" you don’t sense egos interfering with the band’s passion, professionalism and mutual respect; They maintain that the music they create together is most important, and they demonstrate how release of anger makes room for the exhilaration and joy of playing good aggressive music. –Dave Wolff
Lineup:
Amy Taylor: Vocals
Declan Mehrtens: Guitar, keyboards, vocals
Gus Romer: Bass, vocals
Bryce Wilson: Drums, vocals
Track list:
1. Jerkin'
2. Chewing Gum
3. Tiny Bikini
4. Big Dreams
5. It's Mine
6. Motorbike Song
7. Doing In Me Head
8. Pigs
9. Bailing On Me
10. U Should Not Be Doing That
11. Do It Do It
12. Going Somewhere
13. Me And The Girls

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