PERENNIAL IGNITE PUNK AND INDIE ROCK ON "MODERNISM"
Perennial comes out swinging on "Modernism," an explosive burst of punk rock energy that refuses to sit still. Equal parts jagged, infectious, and wildly unpredictable, the track is packed with razor-sharp hooks, fuzzed-out bass, driving rhythms, and enough attitude to fill a basement venue to its breaking point. It's the kind of song that grabs you by the collar from the opening note and never lets go.
Built around a thrilling combination of fuzz bass, tambourine, and stabbing Vox Continental organ, "Modernism" sounds both timeless and completely its own. Every instrument has room to breathe while still colliding into a glorious wall of sound, creating a track that's as danceable as it is chaotic. It's loud, stylish, and bursting with the kind of reckless enthusiasm that made garage rock and punk so irresistible in the first place.
The New England trio have never been interested in staying inside one lane, and "Modernism" is proof of that. Pulling inspiration from legendary acts as varied as The Who, MC5, The Blood Brothers, Stereolab, Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett, and Le Tigre, Perennial effortlessly blur the lines between punk, indie rock, garage rock, soul, and post-punk. Rather than sounding like a collection of influences, they fuse them into something uniquely their own.
The band fittingly describes "Modernism" as "op art to dance to," and that's exactly how it feels. Mellotron loops weave through bursts of electric feedback, freakbeat guitar riffs crash into irresistible Stax and Volt-inspired hooks, and every second is fueled by an infectious sense of urgency. It's organized chaos in the best possible way.
With "Modernism," Perennial have crafted a track that's impossible to ignore. It's bold, vibrant, endlessly replayable, and another reminder that some of the most exciting rock music being made today refuses to play by anyone else's rules.