EARMILK EARMILK
  • NEW MUSIC
    • DANCE
    • ELECTRONIC
    • EXPERIMENTAL
    • HIP-HOP
    • INDIE
    • POP
    • ROCK
  • INDUSTRY NEWS
    • DOCUMENTARIES
    • EVENTS
    • FASHION
    • LIFESTYLE
    • MUSIC GEAR
    • MUSIC INDUSTRY
    • TECHNOLOGY
  • OPINION
  • ALBUM REVIEWS
  • GEAR REVIEWS
  • INTERVIEWS
  • FEATURES
    • FESTIVALS
    • EXCLUSIVES
    • LISTS
    • CONTESTS
    • Photo Journals
  • SERIES
    • Artist to Watch
    • Under The Crust
    • Flashback Friday
    • Suicide Sundaes
    • Daily 2%
    • The Club
    • Weekend Selector
    • Mashup Mondays
    • Artist Remixed
    • Wobble Wednesday
    • Night Rumours
    • Indie Sabbath
    • Straight No Chase
    • Straight From the Teet
  • Jobs
  • About EARMILK
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Submit Music
EARMILK EARMILK
EARMILK EARMILK
  • NEW MUSIC
    • DANCE
    • ELECTRONIC
    • EXPERIMENTAL
    • HIP-HOP
    • INDIE
    • POP
    • ROCK
  • INDUSTRY NEWS
    • DOCUMENTARIES
    • EVENTS
    • FASHION
    • LIFESTYLE
    • MUSIC GEAR
    • MUSIC INDUSTRY
    • TECHNOLOGY
  • OPINION
  • ALBUM REVIEWS
  • GEAR REVIEWS
  • INTERVIEWS
  • FEATURES
    • FESTIVALS
    • EXCLUSIVES
    • LISTS
    • CONTESTS
    • Photo Journals
  • SERIES
    • Artist to Watch
    • Under The Crust
    • Flashback Friday
    • Suicide Sundaes
    • Daily 2%
    • The Club
    • Weekend Selector
    • Mashup Mondays
    • Artist Remixed
    • Wobble Wednesday
    • Night Rumours
    • Indie Sabbath
    • Straight No Chase
    • Straight From the Teet
  • Album Reviews
  • Alternative Rock
  • Americana
  • Indie Pop
  • Indie Rock
  • Rock

Wonderlick fights with a fierce sound and story on "Wonderlick Goes to War" Album

  • August 18, 2025
  • Natalie Patrick
Total
0
Shares
0
0

On their audacious fifth full-length LP, "Wonderlick Goes to War," Wonderlick (Jay Blumenfield and Tim Quirk) adapts music as a weapon and shield, posing the question of whether songs still resist authoritarian tides in 2025. Throughout its 11 tracks, the pair spins tales that temper humor with hopelessness and, by extension, perseverance. If chaos reigns supreme, they suggest, then melody and meaning can still hold significance.

With "Origin Story," Wonderlick wasted no time laying it out in brutally honest terms, "I was born this morning, I haven't always been me." It's a hangover anthem for an unstable world perched on the brink of collapse, but one that opts for survival and resistance over surrender. The song serves as a mission statement for the band, as righteous as it is vulnerable, and it is a call to arms with a reminder that the resistance begins with simply refusing to give in.

"Hollow Bodies" recasts America from a critical, almost satirical perspective, first as a ballad about a guitar and then a snide address to national identity. With "Rhinoceros," Wonderlick tip their hat to Ionesco, and it's the vein of chilling absurdism that's again stoked in the mythology of fascism sneaking up slowly and the normalization of irrational behavior. The story tightens even more with the "Museum of the Inquisition," which directly addresses collective violence once conformity has set in.

"My Love's a Weapon" is a shot of ironic swagger to the record, its breakdown accelerating with urgency. As Blumenfield writes, "When the government is reveling in cruelty, love becomes dangerous." It's a song that embodies the central tension of the album. And then there's "Wag Your Tail," which fairly explodes with sheer, dumb energy, a pop anthem for our age that reminds us that sometimes, dancing isn't about denial, but defiance.

The record's most striking quality, perhaps, is how personal displeasure bleeds into cosmic realities. In "Popping Pills," Quirk turns the routine of daily medication into meditations on mortality, friendship, and irresponsible youth. Even "I Am a Children's Book" traces a cosmos of tragedy in neglect, sounding the silent speech of unused pages whose messages change or vanish with age.

"Wonderlick Goes to War" is a record that stares despair in the face without flinching. It is tethered to the history, satire, and storytelling that consolidated into a collection as confrontational as it is cathartic. Wonderlick songs are proof that music can still march, shout, and fight.

Connect with Wonderlick on Spotify

Total
0
Shares
Share 0
Tweet 0
Share 0
Share 0
Related Topics
  • Wonderlick
Natalie Patrick

Be Kind.

Previous Article
OLLIE
  • Rock

OLLIE returns with his most emotional release, “Guardian Angel”

  • August 18, 2025
  • Natalie Patrick
View Article
Next Article
  • Album Reviews
  • Alt-Pop
  • Pop
  • Singer/songwriter

Rivita's "Snow Angels" Album is an ode to growth and meaning

  • August 18, 2025
  • Natalie Patrick
View Article
You May Also Like
View Article
  • Dreampop
  • Indie Pop
  • New Music

sugar plant welcomes a dream pop winter with "anything"

  • December 9, 2025
smush
View Article
  • Alternative Rock
  • Indie Rock
  • Uncategorized

smush reimagines a classic with heart and homegrown resilience on “Lawyers In Love”

  • December 8, 2025
ryan john clary
View Article
  • Indie
  • Indie Pop
  • Indie Rock

ryan john clary steps into the light with "34"

  • December 8, 2025
Edward Rendon
View Article
  • Alternative Rock

Edward Rendon unveils a spacey indie rock journey in debut EP “Hopeless Romantic”

  • December 8, 2025
Erro
View Article
  • Alternative Rock
  • Indie
  • Indie Rock
  • Pop

Erro steps into the light with his latest album "Shadowland"

  • December 8, 2025
Ethan Pacheco
View Article
  • Acoustic
  • Alternative
  • Alternative Rock
  • Folk Rock

Ethan Pacheco finds his voice in his latest EP “On Either Side”

  • December 8, 2025
The Ocean
View Article
  • Music Videos
  • Rock

The Ocean makes waves with new music video and single “Replaced by Robots”

  • December 8, 2025
Liam C
View Article
  • Alternative Rock
  • Indie Pop

Liam C’s indie anthem lights up the dark seasons in “Tina”

  • December 8, 2025
Popular Music
  • Aura of Embers shares ethereal and riveting new single "One Soul"
    • December 9, 2025
  • Divergent
    Divergent drops high-voltage visuals in “Not Until It’s Right” [Music Video]
    • December 9, 2025
  • Rebecca Foon chats new album 'Black Butterflies', her barn studio, Governors Island and more! [Interview]
    • December 8, 2025
  • Joachim Horsley redefines classical boundaries with Latin GRAMMY-Nominated ‘Afro Bach’
    • December 9, 2025
  • Misha and BeMyFiasco turn up the heat on spicy track "Burning Fire"
    • December 8, 2025
Recent Scoops
  • Ultra Music Festival's RESISTANCE unveils stacked 2026 lineup led by rare B2B Pairings
    • December 4, 2025
  • Cenyc : A rising artist building soundscapes laden with legacy and discipline
    • December 1, 2025
  • Winter Music Conference returns to Miami Music Week with new home for 2026
    • November 6, 2025
  • Simone Feroci establishes his towering presence in the world of bass guitars with hopeful track "California Forever"
    • October 30, 2025
Community Voices
  • From Machismo To Mujeres: Women As The Face Of Reggaeton
    • July 14, 2022
  • Tyler the creator
    4 things I learned on the 'Call Me If You Get Lost' tour
    • March 31, 2022
  • 4 things every artist needs to think about in 2022
    • January 27, 2022
  • The TikTok Takeover of Hip-Hop
    • January 11, 2022

EARMILK EARMILK
  • Jobs
  • About EARMILK
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Submit Music
All Milk. No Duds.

Input your search keywords and press Enter.