Glaas is an international band from Berlin, Germany, featuring five
    ladies and gentlemen who all together have a rather very long curriculum
    vitae... There is Seth (American, guitar) who has played in numerous
    bands from numerous genres including
    Clock Of Time,
    Couteau Latex,
    Useless Eaters,
    Idiota Civilizzato,
    Life Trap
    (I love Life Trap!) and many more (these days he is involved in an
    electronic hip hop project called
    Blaq Hammer
    and in a no-wave/post-punk act called
        ÖPNV)... there is Raquel (Spanish, bass) who has played in
          Tortura,
          Owner,
          Retrofuture, her own solo project called
          Lacquer
          and plenty of other bands... there is Alexis (german?, vocals) from
          the furious
          Cage Kicker, there is Cosey (german, synth) from
          DAS DAS
          who also released a solo tape last year called
          Interior Escapes
          and there is Jan the drummer who was also behind the drums in
        Idiota Civilizzato
            and
            Life Fucker.
  Yes on paper Glaas does look like a "super group" or an
          "all-star punk band" and we know that the result, although almost
          always making labels extremely happy, can very quickly turn into a
          pompous show-off where everyone tries to justify their "reputation" by
          overdoing it (I have in mind the example of a 7", recently released on
          the same label as the group which interests us today, yuck) but let's
          not give in to the ease of prejudice, let's open our minds and ears and listen carefully to these
          first three tracks, a little appetizer before the release of a LP in a
          few months.
   
  Easy Living was probably the obvious song to choose for a
          promo tape, it's not "surprising" in the sense that you know you've heard that kind of stuff before but you also remember enjoying it a lot. It's a very good catchy
          bass-driven song mixing modern post-punk influences (Sarcasm, Clock Of Time and even
          Negative Space
          at times) with old classics like Crisis and
          Uk Decay (the "punk period"). Lead by Alexis' vocals,
          which remain quite "punk" (if that means anything), the mix lets the
          upfront guitar build the melody whereas the synth stays in the
          background... and that works really well! That's exactly the kind of
          "post-punk" I like to listen to!
  All this remains rather similar on I'm The Problem and
          Concrete Coffin (even if Alexis' vocals get even more
          aggressive, which is not to my displeasure) with the exception of the
          synth which gets more in the way of the guitar, building melodies of
          its own, a very fashionable symptom nowadays which can really quickly
          lead to some synth-punk bullshit if you're not cautious (I hate
          synth-punk)... and Concrete Coffin for example is clearly
          approaching my tolerance limit in terms of synth melodies...
   
  So you got the idea, Glaas proved being able to make a great
          songs of "predictable" post-punk and may give birth to one of the best
          European album of the genre in 2022 (and I'm sure the hype around it
          is going to be absolutely massive anyway) but it will find grace in my
          eyes only if the whole holds the road in a certain diversity (that
          should be fine in view of these three tracks) but especially if the
          majority of the songs are not built around upfront synth melodies...
          but that's probably just me and my old allergy to "new wave".
  Anyway the best way to have a good preview of what's will be in the
          LP is to watch this livestream concert with Pigeon (Pigeon rules!) recorded at
          SO36 last August (and it's true that it's rather promising):
 
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