Thursday, May 14, 2026

Bucket - Mosaic

Following an early full-length, a couple singles and then last year’s EP Muck, Dublin three-piece Bucket is back with the 4 song EP Mosaic and their own brand of industrial hardcore electronic noise rock.  While that sounds like it would be loud, noisy and abrasive, and it is, they always manage to give every song an incredible sense of melody.  Having never heard of the band before listening to the new EP, I went back through those earlier releases.  While you can hear the rumblings of what they sound like today on that first release (the details of this release are very limited and it appears it may just be the band's guitarist and vocalist Cian Dahdouh), there is more reliance on elements of garage rock and psychedelia.  As I made my way through their other releases I could hear them honing more and more into their sound, which they have really found on Mosaic.  Lyrically Dahdouh says, "All of the lyrics are interior monologues from fictional narrators dealing with extreme psychological states - paranoia, mania, trauma, obsession. I liked the idea of these different perspectives forming a bigger picture, like a mosaic. I found it interesting to think anyone around you could be having thoughts like this and you’d never know."  “56345” gets things started and is a fifty-five second wall of screeching, pummeling, mind numbing noise that will have you jumping in your seat the moment you hit play.  After opening with manic flutters of percussion, “DNB” explodes into a blistering blast of aggression and noise, then about halfway in the tempo changes into noisy screeching chaos.  After starting off with a hard-edged, pulsing electro industrial tune that comes across as suffocating, “Nonsense” shifts into more of an industrial dance beat with an extremely catchy groove.  “Nails” is sparse and slow building at first, giving it a sense of anxiety, but then becomes a wall of raw, speaker rattling noise with a groove that will have your head bobbing.  With Emmet McNamee’s mysterious bassline running underneath it, “Memento” has a hardcore drive with Korey Thomas absolutely pummeling the drums and their ever-present wall of noise.  Mosaic is an incredible new EP with a sound that is honestly hard to describe and really needs (and should) be heard to really understand what’s going on.  Really looking forward to hearing where Bucket will be going from here.  


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