Science in Nature scrapes the sheen off Los Angeles and rebuilds from the bones: a three-piece conjuring rhythm and rupture from raw post-punk grooves. Joel Petersen (ex-The Faint, Broken Spindles) deals jagged guitar lines and suave vocals; Han-Su Kim delivers low-end counterpoint and close-knit harmonies; and Danny Deleon (Soft Kill, Moving Units) mans the kit like a metronome caught in a feedback loop. Their ethos? Friction over flourish. No distortion. No disguise. Just movement, math, and muscle memory.
Edge of A Line, their latest single, is a twitchy tangle of big-but-nimble guitars, an expertly minimal groove, and tangled harmonies. It snaps stiff and sharp, a serrated slab that owes a blood debt to Entertainment!-era Gang of Four. Guitars jab like accusations: dry, angular, all elbows and edges…while vocals twist between a half-croon and a cracked cackle, nodding toward Violent Femmes at their most nervy.
It lurches like a lopsided march: Andy Gill’s spiked posture colliding with Peter Ivers’ oddball charm and Talking Heads’ cool detachment. The wild basslines and erratic percussion feel like eavesdropping on a squabble between your brain and your body: taut, tense, teetering on epiphany or collapse. No warmth, no welcome…just an itch-scratch call-and-response that almost spins out of control… tambourine included.
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