Monday, July 06, 2026

Dream Attack Drum Machine — “Bootlicker”


Some new bands introduce themselves politely. Dream Attack Drum Machine do not.

“Bootlicker,” the opening track from their first demo, arrives from Leiria, Portugal, with a deliberately raw combination of post-punk tension, emo-darkness and 1980s drum-machine energy. It is short, direct and slightly ugly in the right way — built from heavy bass, synthetic pulse, simple guitar lines and vocals that sound less like performance and more like pressure escaping from a closed room.

The project appears on Headshrinker Records, a small Portuguese label that describes itself through rock’n’roll madness rather than polished industry language. That is important. “Bootlicker” does not feel like a product trying to enter a playlist. It feels like a demo in the original sense: a rough signal from a band still forming its own nervous system.

What makes the track interesting is the collision of moods. There is post-punk discipline, but also emotional excess. There is an 80s machine rhythm, but no nostalgic comfort. The title itself suggests submission, power, resentment — a small political word turned into a dark, physical song.

Released in June 2026, “Bootlicker” is not refined, and that is exactly why it works. It has the energy of something that has not yet been cleaned up by taste, management or consensus.

MUZORAMA recommends it for listeners who like their post-punk nervous, synthetic, bass-heavy and still close to the basement.



Dust Sucker Jazz by TV-99-AD



TV-99-AD — “Dust Sucker Jazz”

Some tracks do not arrive from the future. They return from a half-forgotten room where machines were still physical, rhythm was still discovered by hand, and jazz could accidentally appear inside electronic music without asking permission.

“Dust Sucker Jazz” by TV-99-AD is one of those strange returns. Officially released in July 2026 by Tokyo’s FORM@ RECORDS, the track comes from the Dutch group’s late-1990s archive — a period when the trio were working with hardware, DAT recordings, breakbeats, electric jazz fragments and the dry imagination of underground European electronics.

The title almost sounds like a joke, but the music is serious in the best possible way: loose, dusty, mechanical, warm, slightly absurd. It does not behave like a jazz track, and it does not fully belong to techno or IDM either. Instead, it moves somewhere between a late-night studio jam, a forgotten breakbeat experiment and a fictional soundtrack for an empty shopping mall after midnight.

TV-99-AD were active in the Dutch underground during the 1990s, then disappeared from view for a long time. Now, through the Japanese label FORM@ RECORDS, this material receives a second life. That international detour — Netherlands to Japan, 1990s to 2026 — makes “Dust Sucker Jazz” more than just an archival release. It feels like a small musical time capsule being opened in public.

MUZORAMA recommends it for listeners who like electronic music with history, humor, texture and a little bit of mystery.