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  1. Twin Serpent – True Norwegian Blackgrass Review By Tyme

    One of my absolute favorite articles of clothing in my closet is a beat-up, slightly holey, faded black Darkthrone t-shirt from 1998, with the band logo on the front, and “True Norwegian Black Metal” printed across the back. I share this, for what I hope are obvious reasons, to explain what initially drew me to Twin Serpent’s sophomore record, True Norwegian Blackgrass. That, and it was floating in an exclusive area of the sump pit reserved for those nuggets Steel specifically says need a review. Four years removed from their Loyal Blood Records 2022 debut, Feels Like Heaven, North Of Hell, which garnered comparisons to Godspeed You! Black Emperor and Tom Waits, this “cute outsider band” from Trondheim has a new label, Svart Records, and on True Norwegian Blackgrass, Twin Serpent teases “12 songs about love, betrayal and black holes with country licks, rock ‘n roll kicks and heaps of punk attitude.” So, coif those multi-colored mohawks, strap on those bullet-belts and arm spikes, and pull those cowboy boots on as we take True Norwegian Blackgrass for a prairie ride.

    True Norwegian Blackgrass is a punk-infused, crust-country bluesabilly-thon full of quirky energy. Ditching the corpse paint and blood baths, Twin Serpent’s aesthetic is born from deliberate artistic intent—just scope that cover art touted as “weird, rowdy, and just a little bit black metal.” Face paint? Pfffft! Full body snake paint and no fucks given come standard. Spirited from the start, album opener “Space Heater” glides in on a wave of Dick Dale-esque surf guitar before going full-on Dead Kennedys with oodles of punkish energy and roars from Timo Silvola and Hanna Fauske that would have Fenriz smiling. From there, however, True Norwegian Blackgrass traverses a more eclectic musical terrain without sacrificing its punk moxie. Silvola’s countrified banjo plucks and acoustic strumming bring Bridge City Sinners and The Goddamn Gallows to mind (“Stellar Suicide”), but can folk out too on tracks like “Kipu Kivi,” which also features him chanting in his native Finnish. Back-boning Twin Serpent’s “rock”ier side are Fauske’s driving bass lines, Tony Gonzalez’s electric riffs and leads, and the shifty, exactly-what-we-need-when-we-need-it drumming of Viktor Kristensen. Together, these three bring a bluesy, alt-rock flair that had me feeling everything from Violent Femmes (“Hundromshelvete”) and Days of the New (“Tusen Takk”), to The Cramps (“Radiophobia”). To say True Norwegian Blackgrass seems a scatterbrained stew of styles would be an understatement, but I’ll be damned if Twin Serpent doesn’t pull it off.

    Twin Serpent write big hooks, stacking True Norwegian Blackgrass with memorable moments. Whimsical percussion, poppy bass lines, and fuzzy guitar work make “Ærlig Talt” an off-kilter, punky fun ditty, while the catchier-than-thou chorus of the hoe-down-ready “Freak Flag” is stickier than hell, and should inspire mass consumption of cheap beer. My favorite song, ballad “Ain’t Home No More,” features a great harmonic duet between Silvola and Fauske, sung over simple banjo and acoustic guitar before feathering in surging electric chords that, in a live setting, could easily trail off into a stellar jam section. “Holy Ghost,” another tavern-tier stand-out, features more of Silvola and Fauske’s vocal harmonizations and sports a chorus that will have you swaying on your bar stool, arm around your drinking buddy, belting it out while sloshing beer from your pint glass.


    Twin Serpent
    ’s versatility is their greatest strength. I imagine they’d fit in just as easily gigging at the local brew pub as they would a barn dance or even Chicago’s Riot Fest. Covering so many musical landscapes, an album like True Norwegian Blackgrass could have easily landed as an unfocused mess. But it’s the vocal interplay, harmonies, and trade-offs between Silvola and Fauske—reminiscent of early B-52’s—keeping things intact. As many different places as this record goes, it still manages to sound like Twin Serpent, and with twelve tracks spanning 37 minutes—most songs clocking in between two and three minutes each—it never loiters long enough to get boring or tiresome. Dubbed “the wizard technician,” Vebjørn Svanberg Numme harnesses all of the foursome’s idiosyncrasies and channels them through a production that perfectly captures everything that makes the Twin Serpent sound tick.

    True Norwegian Blackgrass is a wonderful change-of-pace album you could totally spin when you don’t know what to listen to. Twin Serpent have added all the right ingredients to create a recipe loaded with eclectic energy and punk rock attitude. From note one, I was hooked and had more fun with True Norwegian Blackgrass than I’d ever guessed. I fully recommend you give it a try too.

    Rating: 3.5/5.0
    DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: 320kbps mp3
    Label: Svart Records
    Websites: Bandcamp | Facebook | Instagram
    Releases Worldwide: May 8th, 2026

    #2026 #35 #AltCountry #BridgeCitySinners #DaysOfTheNew #May26 #Norwegian #PunkRock #Review #SvartRecords #TheCramps #TheGaddamnGallows #TrueNorwegianBlackgrass #TwinSerpent #ViolentFemmes
  2. #SongsForHealing

    [ The key is so distant
    I've opened doors
    Know when to listen
    Know what to listen for, yeah

    The shelf in the room
    Has been the way
    Of holding me
    And letting me stay

    Kick me out
    Let me go (go)
    I don't belong here no more
    A releasing sense
    Of getting tired
    Hold myself
    I can't hold myself

    The shelf in the room
    Has been the way
    Of holding me
    And letting me stay
    The shelf in the room
    Has been so true
    I can hide in the shelf in the room

    Holding out (holding out)
    Never hold in (never holding out)
    Holding out (holding out, never hold)
    Holding out (holding out)
    Never hold in (never holding out)
    Holding out (holding out, never hold)

    Know when to listen
    Know what to listen for
    Believe in resistance
    Don't let them tell you anymore
    Is there anyway (no)
    To get away? (No)
    Ask myself
    While I stay inside, yeah

    The shelf in the room
    Has been the way
    Of holding me
    And letting me stay
    The shelf in the room
    Has been so true
    I can hide in the shelf in the room, yeah

    Holding out (holding out)
    Never hold in (never holding out)
    Holding out (holding out, never hold)
    Holding out (holding out)
    Never hold in (never holding out)
    Holding out (holding out, never hold)

    Holding out, never hold in
    Holding out, never hold in
    Holding out, never hold
    Holding out, never hold in
    Holding out, never hold in
    (Holding out, never hold)

    The key is so distant
    I've closed my doors
    The shelf in the room
    Is rain waiting to pour ]

    m.youtube.com/watch?v=Cw6bgdJl

    #DaysOfTheNew #music #MusicVideo #lyrics