Jamie Jones

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A survivor of the nu-metal years, Jamie Jones lives in Cardiff, Wales stockpiling good music ready for the inevitable revival. “They say we could never have another Limp Bizkit or another Coal Chamber, that we’ve learned our lesson,” he says, “but people have short memories. It’s only a matter of time.”

He writes about music in the hopes of delaying the inevitable as long as possible. Primarily a reviewer of heavy music – particularly doom, heavy psych, stoner rock and post-metal – he’s also the kind of dilettante who’ll fling words at anything that can keep his attention long enough. He believes Mike Vest’s guitar tone will soon attract visitors from another galaxy wanting to know how we learned their language and that if you listen to the entire Grails back catalogue in the right order you’ll unlock the meaning of the universe and become infinitely powerful.

A keen beard cultivator, amateur curry chef/brewer of ales and wannabe boxing aficionado, his music writing is collected at his blog ghost signals. He also occasionally writes about videogames and has been known to attempt to write fiction.

Articles by Jamie Jones

Dope Body – Kunk

Dope Body have often sounded like a band being pulled in several directions – their love of 90s US hardcore outliers and noisey alt-rock is evident but they’ve never sounded quite sure whether they want to take it in weirder or more accessible territory. On Kunk they almost manage to do both. They’re still a band at war with themselves; a struggle which every now and again brings out the best in them. By Jamie Jones

The Sword – High Country

Evolution can be painful – but the trick The Sword have pulled here is making it seem as difficult as kicking back, opening a beer, dusting off a few old long neglected records and rediscovering how much you loved them back before you learned to worry about genre. – By Jamie Jones

Hey Colossus / Hotel Wrecking City Traders – Split

Two bands flying high and doing what they please. If you’re already a fan of either band you’re probably already on this – if not then it’s as good a time as any to find out what you’ve been missing. – By Jamie Jones

Watertank – Destination Unknown

Whilst they’re pretty derivative Destination Unknown is a hard record not to like, even when your mind drifts to the bands who they’ve drawn so much from. – By Jamie Jones

Mutoid Man – Bleeder

Not only have Mutoid Man pulled out one of the most jaw dropping and exhilarating metal/hardcore records released in a long, long time they’ve also put out a record that stands up to anything either of its more famous band members have ever put their name to. – By Jamie Jones

Coffinfish – I Am Providence

My revelation during ‘Watcher’ wasn’t quite that dramatic, but it shed light on the myriad details that set Coffinfish apart from their peers, and revealed that their best moments are at once beautiful and terrible enough to have been torn from pages of the Necronomicon itself. – By Jamie Jones

Dead Shed Jokers – Dead Shed Jokers

When they’re at their best they pull off the ever impressive trick of managing to not quite sound like anyone else despite sounding immediately familiar. By Jamie Jones

Hogslayer – Defacer

For those who like their sludge as miserable, myopic and misanthropic as possible – or just want a record to stomp around their living room to pretending to be Godzilla creating a ruckus in downtown Tokyo, Hogslayer have got your back. – By Jamie Jones

Festival Review: Red Sun Festival, Cardiff. May 1st – 3rd 2015

What they have in this little backstreet is a like a UK summit for fans of All Things Heavy, with a unique and wonderful atmosphere and space for some great unheralded bands to do their thing. By Jamie Jones

Live Review: Pinkshinyultrablast, Flyying Colours, Threatmantics at Clwb Ifor Bach, Cardiff. 6 May, 2015.

“The combination of Slowdive-esque waves of guitar noise, hook laden synth melodies and utterly beguiling vocals atop irresistible rhythms is undeniably potent.

Interview: Jared Warren from Big Business

Last year Big Business self-released their latest album ‘Battlefields Forever’, which recently got an official European release through Solar Flare Records. Jamie Jones asked bassist/singer Jared Warren some questions about the new record, signing to Solar Flare Records and more.

A Secret Revealed – The Bleakness

Post-rock atmospherics, hardcore confessional vocals, bursts of feral black metal, metalcore breakdowns – it’s all fair game, so long as it contributes to the oppressive atmosphere of hopelessness and despair. – By Jamie Jones

Big Business – Battlefields Forever

Whilst they’ve always been a band that probably shouldn’t work on paper – yet almost always have – here they make being Big Business sound like the most natural thing in the world. – By Jamie Jones

obe – Exit Planet Crust (Exclusive track stream!)

A trio of effervescent, neatly crafted songs that are dead set on merrily bouncing from riff to riff until everyone is grinning along with them. By Jamie Jones

Enablers – The Rightful Pivot

It’s fair to say they get better as storytellers with each passing record. By Jamie Jones.

Pyramids – A Northern Meadow

It’s a beautiful nightmare, a fusion of the ethereal and the brutal that, even without the more out­ there moments of their debut, doesn’t quite sound like anything else. – By Jamie Jones

Henry Blacker – Summer Tombs

This is dirty groove laden rock weaponised and wielded with ill intentions. – By Jamie Jones

Lord Dying – Poisoned Altars

Don’t go into ‘Poisoned Altars’ expecting your horizons altering. What you’ll find instead is an album full of competence, confidence and fuelled by a deep abiding passion for heavy metal. – By Jamie Jones

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