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REVIEW: Ivy LeagueTX / Turnover / Maker / Such Gold – Split 7″

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Artist: Ivy LeagueTX, Turnover, Maker, Such Gold
Album: Ivy LeagueTX / Turnover / Maker / Such Gold – Split 7″
Genre: Pop-Punk / Alternative
Label: Broken Rim Records

In what may be one of the raddest split line-ups in recent history, Turnover, Maker, Ivy League, and Such Gold have banded together to release a split chock full of punk tinged rock. Through Broken Rim Records, each respective band gets their chance to indulge into the musicianship they have at hand.

Ivy LeagueTX have the pleasure of opening the work for us, leading us in with a brooding introduction that is followed by rasp and distortion. Yelling through their piece of the split, “Cave,” Ivy League set the tone for the entire split. Concise, to the point, and tinged with a punk attitude, Ivy LeagueTX ask that you leave your anxieties at the door, and yell along with them. I sure did.

Following “Cave,” Turnover changes around the dynamics a bit. Continuing off of their stellar LP, Magnolia, the band forwards their brighter tones, as well as their constantly growing songwriting skills. “I Would Hate You If I Could” would have been the fan favorite off of Magnolia, so it will just have to do with being the favorite now. Group vocals, catchy melodies, textured guitars, and a tight rhythm section, Turnover sing our woes so we don’t have to. Something about the band’s music so perfectly encapsulates the trials of growing up in a cul-de-sac, waiting for the school year to be over to yield a new experience.

Side B opens with Maker’s “Here She Comes,” and acts as the split’s most pushing work. Beginning with an appreciation for ’90s alternative rock, Maker show us a different side of what they have released before. Never forgetting their punk upbringing, Maker tie together all the vast and various fields of rock and roll’s journey through time. At times you will experience straight power chords, but not for too long before getting swept back up by melodies that John Rzeznik could have wrote. “Here She Comes” culminates in the band’s finest work to date, and the better offering of the split.

Between the middle section of the varied tracks from Turnover and Maker, Such Gold bring us back to center with “Framed.” Anyone who has listened to the band before should feel no surprises with the punk onslaught the band brings, as they continue to bring their trademark guitar style to the foreground. Book-ended by the yell-alongs from Ivy LeagueTX and Such Gold, the split is opened and closed with reminders of why screaming back at your speakers in your basement is accepted in this community.

With each band releasing solid work, and Turnover and Maker continuing to push their envelopes, the 7” is a welcomed addition to my spinning schedule. While incredibly short, think of each track as a taste for what is to come, and with that being the case, the future looks extremely bright, as well as extremely catchy.

SCORE: 8/10

Review written by Drew Caruso – follow him on Twitter.

Drew Caruso is a Bostonian who, when not writing about music and film, spends his time getting lost in New England, reading books, talking about science whether people want to listen or not, and more. To see the thoughts of a scientist by day and a writer by night, follow him on Twitter.

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