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Edinburgh Masked Metalcore Outlier OBELISK Unleashes “Set Me Free” From ‘Brushed By Darkness’

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Edinburgh’s masked metalcore outlier OBELISK charges forward with “Set Me Free,” a blistering new single from his debut album ‘Brushed By Darkness,’ out now. Anonymous and entirely self-produced, OBELISK operates as a one-man force. Every riff, every lyric, every layered texture comes from his own hands, forging a sound that is heavy yet deeply personal.

“Set Me Free” surges with emotional intensity, fusing crushing breakdowns with melodic lift. The track expands his sonic world, balancing confrontation and vulnerability in equal measure. It is bold and unfiltered, built from instinct and sharpened by deliberate songwriting.

OBELISK first emerged with “Stardust Cycle,” followed by “Where Do You End?” and “Tragically Designed.” Each release tightened his grip on the alt-metal conversation, showcasing chaotic energy shaped with precision. The momentum carries into ‘Brushed By Darkness,’ an album that shifts between moods while exploring isolation, unrest and creative struggle.

Drawing inspiration from Sleep Token, Green Day, Bring Me The Horizon and Electric Callboy, OBELISK refuses to sit in one lane. ‘Brushed By Darkness’ stands as a defining opening chapter. Confessional. Confrontational. Relentless.

Belgian Noise Punks RONKER Unleash “Limelighter” From ‘Respect The Hustle, I Won’t Be Your Dog Forever’

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Belgian noise-niks RONKER crash back in with “Limelighter,” a maximalist blast from their album ‘Respect The Hustle, I Won’t Be Your Dog Forever,’ out now via LABELMAN. The track barrels forward with circus-metal chaos, stacking a massive chorus, emocore breakdown, choir arrangement and a chromatic death metal riff into one volatile finale. It is theatrical, abrasive and impossible to ignore.

“Limelighter shows RONKER at our most maximalist, pulling out most of the bells and whistles the band have in their arsenal. We thought big: big chorus, big emocore breakdown, big choir arrangement, big chromatic death metal riff at the finish. The end (of the album) is near, anything goes,” the band say. The ambition is audible from the first hit to the final crash.

Written on the road, the song digs into the strain and absurdity of a nomadic entertainer’s life. “It’s one of those kind of songs you start writing and immediately think of as a set-closer, because of its epic nature. A song about singing songs in front of people to close the show: talk about going full-circle.” It feels built for sweat-drenched rooms and roaring pits.

Following the punch of “No Sweat,” which hit both the Kerrang! Chart and Metal Hammer’s Best New Metal Songs of The Week, RONKER double down on layered aggression. Drawing lines between At The Drive In, Helmet and The Armed, while nodding to David Bowie and Refused, they forge something feral and hook-heavy. A headline show at The Lexington in London marks the next eruption.

SEE RONKER LIVE:

27/02/2026 – Altstadt, Eindhoven (NL)

07/03/2026 – Paradiso, Amsterdam (NL)

14/03/2026 – L’Entrepot, Arlon (BE)

28/03/2026 – Terneuzen On Fire, Terneuzen (NL)

25/04/2026 – The Lexington, London (UK)

16/05/2026 – Sonic Whip, Nijmegen (NL)

08/08/2026 – Alcatraz Festival, Kortrijk (BE)

16/08/2026 – Dynamo Metalfest, Eindhoven (NL)

Why Upgrading Your Home’s Siding Is One of the Smartest Improvements You Can Make

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By Mitch Rice

When most homeowners think about home upgrades, they often focus first on kitchens, bathrooms, and interior decor. While those areas certainly influence daily comfort and style, there’s one component of a home that quietly plays a far broader role, the exterior siding. It protects your investment, enhances energy efficiency, and shapes curb appeal every time someone passes by.

In the Sacramento area, choosing exterior siding from GVD Renovations & Remodeling has become a go-to option for homeowners looking to combine long-lasting protection with thoughtful design. Siding doesn’t just dress a home, it shields it, strengthens it, and even improves how it performs throughout the seasons.

This article explores why siding matters, how it works, and what homeowners should consider when planning a siding upgrade that stands the test of time.

Siding Is Protection First – Aesthetic Second

Most people think of siding as a cosmetic upgrade, something that makes a house look better. That’s only half the story. The primary purpose of siding is to protect the structure beneath it.

Homes are constantly exposed to forces most people barely notice every day, rain, wind, sun, temperature swings, humidity, and environmental pollutants. Over time, these elements wear down exterior materials, inviting moisture into walls, reducing insulation effectiveness, and creating conditions where mold or rot can take hold.

Siding forms the first line of defense:

  • It repels water and prevents moisture infiltration.
  • It reduces exposure to UV degradation.
  • It protects structural materials from weather stresses

It guards against insects and pests that can burrow behind weak spots.

In Sacramento’s climate,with hot summers, winter rains, and shifting temperatures, quality siding is especially important. Upgrading to a durable material installed with precision helps preserve the home’s integrity long after the initial installation.

Energy Efficiency Begins at the Exterior

While we often think of insulation, HVAC systems, and windows as the major players in energy performance, siding plays a supporting role that is easy to overlook.

Air leaks and thermal bridging, where heat moves through gaps and seams occur around the edges of siding if installation is not tight and continuous. Modern siding systems, when combined with proper insulation and air sealing techniques, help create a tighter building envelope. This translates into more stable indoor temperatures and less strain on heating and cooling systems.

Here’s what improved siding can do for energy efficiency:

  • Reduce drafts that let conditioned air escape
  • Minimize heat gain during summer heat waves
  • Improve performance of insulation behind the exterior

Lower heating and cooling costs over time

Homeowners often see these benefits slowly at first, but over months and years, the difference in energy usage becomes noticeable. Siding isn’t a standalone energy system, but it complements and enhances the components that make homes more efficient and comfortable.

Design, Curb Appeal, and Personal Expression

Even though protection is its primary job, siding defines a home’s aesthetic identity. Siding is the canvas on which architectural style is expressed. The profile, texture, and color you choose dramatically influence how a home looks from the street, from the curb, and even from inside rooms bathed in natural light reflecting off exterior surfaces.

Panel siding for modern minimalism

Color selection matters, too. Light hues reflect heat and can make structures feel brighter, while darker tones add sophistication but may absorb more thermal energy.

A siding upgrade shouldn’t be an afterthought. It’s an opportunity to express style and reinforce architectural harmony. The right choice makes a home look intentional, cohesive, and well cared for.

Resilience Against Climate and Time

Sacramento’s climate exposes homes to diverse stressors. Summer sun, winter storms, and occasional wind events all test siding materials. Some materials, like traditional wood, weather faster and require ongoing maintenance like painting and sealing. Others like fiber cement or engineered panels resist rot, pests, and moisture with much less upkeep.

Modern siding options often include:

  • Weather-resistant coatings
  • Fade-resistant pigments
  • Reinforced edges for wind resistance

Moisture barriers that work with drainage planes

These engineered solutions go beyond simple coverage. They anticipate environmental conditions and help the home stand up to them year after year. Choosing the right material and installation method ensures your investment protects the home long after installation costs are forgotten.

Installation: Craftsmanship Matters More Than You Think

Upgrading siding is not just about selecting material. Quality installation is equally, if not more, important. Even premium siding can underperform if installed without attention to air sealing, flashing, alignment, and moisture management principles.

Proper siding installation ensures:

  • Consistent fit and tight seams
  • Correct moisture barriers and flashings
  • Integration with windows, doors, and trim
  • Structural alignment that prevents gaps

Thermal performance through careful sealing

Professional installers understand not only how to attach siding panels, but also how to integrate them into the home as a unified weather-resistant system. This is one of the reasons working with experienced teams like the ones who provide exterior solutions from GVD Renovations & Remodeling pays off, the attention to detail in installation protects performance and reduces long-term risk.

Maintenance That Saves Time and Money

One of the greatest benefits of modern siding is low maintenance. Unlike older wood siding that requires frequent repainting, sanding, and sealing, quality modern materials often need nothing more than occasional cleaning and inspection.

Data and information are provided for informational purposes only, and are not intended for investment or other purposes.

The Compulsions Unleash Gritty Lyric Video For “Baby, Baby, Baby (Baby)”

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With a dirty-blues snarl and a downtown punk streak sharpened by thirty years in the East Village, The Compulsions return with the new lyric video for their swaggering single, “Baby, Baby, Baby (Baby).”

Frontman Rob Carlyle—a fixture of East Village bars and clubs since long before the neighborhood’s vibe got steamrolled—pairs his junkyard-dog vocals with chainsaw guitars, a coffin-shaker organ, and a menacing, steam-hammer drum loop crafted during early demo sessions with longtime collaborator and New York Blues Hall of Fame Master Artist, Hugh Pool.

The track is a wicked little blues-punk brawler: lust, frustration, and comeuppance, delivered with Carlyle’s trademark sneer. When the solo section hits, Carlyle and Pool trade licks like two alley cats fighting over a midnight mate, while Rob Clores (Black Crowes, Spin Doctors) sends his organ into a wild, gospel-gone-wrong wail.

The lyric video—art-directed and designed by Carlyle—pairs grainy black-and-white shots of Clores tearing into his piano part as Carlyle watches and Pool rides the board (all shot by Delissa Santos) with hot-pink handwritten typography, giving the whole piece the look of a lost punk-blues flyer pulled off a seedy club wall at 3 a.m.

“Baby, Baby, Baby (Baby)” continues Carlyle’s tradition of blending traditional blues grit with the raw, neon-soaked, back-alley pulse that has defined his work since the beginning—music born at the crossroads between a juke joint and a dive bar on Avenue A.

Mason Hill Announce March UK Tour And Unleash New Single “Remember” With Tom Ward

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After two rapidly sold-out comeback shows in London and Glasgow, Mason Hill are taking their revitalised rock show back on the road this March. With tickets already moving fast, the Glasgow band are riding a serious high as they reintroduce themselves with new frontman Tom Ward and a wave of fresh material. Guitarist James Bird promises loud nights and new music, while bassist Matt Ward says the band are firing on all cylinders and ready to deliver fan favourites alongside brand-new tracks.

The tour follows the release of their huge new single “Remember,” the first to feature Tom Ward on vocals. Darker in tone and loaded with emotion, the track signals a bold new chapter, powered by the brooding production of Dan Weller. It marks the first step toward a new album, half of which is already recorded, with more sessions underway as the band build toward an early 2026 full-length release.

Four years after ‘Against The Wall,’ Mason Hill return with renewed intent and a sharpened sound. While the core lineup remains intact, Tom Ward’s versatile voice adds new depth and dimension, bringing fresh energy to the band’s signature style. With resilience forged through years of setbacks and determination, Mason Hill are stepping forward with confidence and hunger.

UK Tour 2026:

17 March – Manchester Academy 3
18 March – Bristol Exchange
19 March – London Underworld
20 March – Wolverhampton KK’s Steel Mill
22 March – Glasgow Garage

4 April – Takedown Festival, Portsmouth
24 – 26 July – Steelhouse Festival, Ebbw Vale

Irish Duo Greywind Share Final Preview Of ‘Severed Heart City’ With New Single “The Scarecrow”

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Irish brother-sister duo Greywind release “The Scarecrow,” the final preview of their album ‘Severed Heart City,’ out now via FLG. Guitarist Paul O’Sullivan describes the song as reflecting on watching someone you love struggle without realizing how deeply they are cared for, while vocalist Steph frames the scarecrow as a devil-and-angel figure symbolizing the internal battles shared between the band and their fans.

Leading up to the album’s arrival, Greywind unveiled a run of emotionally charged singles, including the self-affirming “Make Believe (L.O.V.E. ME)” and the socially viral “Swerve,” which received support from Alyx Holcombe on BBC Radio 1 Introducing Rock. Produced, engineered, and mixed by Sam Guaiana, ‘Severed Heart City’ channels the duo’s longtime emo inspirations while delivering towering hooks and dramatic intensity.

Steph and Paul describe ‘Severed Heart City’ as an extended allegory for trauma and the path toward acceptance and hope. Formed in the wake of personal loss, the band have poured their journey into an album that embraces vulnerability while urging perseverance. It is a record built for catharsis, connection, and singing every word back at full volume.

New Zealand Artist Pickle Darling Expands The World Of ‘Bots’ With Companion EP ‘crumple zones’

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Fresh off the release of their fourth album ‘Bots’, New Zealand’s Pickle Darling returns with ‘crumple zones’, a companion EP that reimagines and expands the record’s sonic landscape. Where ‘Bots’ was carefully assembled, this new collection leans into immediacy and live energy, offering alternate versions, acoustic reinterpretations, and a collaboration with Father/Daughter labelmate Anna McClellan.

“massive everything (alternate version)” reframes the original with lush guitars and Nashville tuning, exploring the emotional “crumple zones” we build to protect ourselves. Meanwhile, “human bean (alternate version)” strips things back to delicate fingerpicking, revealing a softer core. On “pinwheels (featuring Anna McClellan),” the long-awaited collaboration unfolds with an intentionally messy charm, Anna’s vocals recorded casually on a phone, background noise intact, creating a warm, nostalgic intimacy.

The EP also extends into the visual realm, with artwork inspired by layered woodcut prints that experiment with color and texture, echoing the songs’ exploratory spirit. Approached as a weekend workshop rather than a traditional album cycle, ‘crumple zones’ captures Pickle Darling in a playful, expansive mode, free from pressure and open to possibility.

Welsh Alt-Rock Trio CHROMA Close The Year With New Single “Lifehack”

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Pontypridd trio CHROMA round off a breakout stretch with their new single “Lifehack,” out now via Alcopop! Records. Doubling down on their fuzzy, melancholic direction, the track explores the surreal logistics of dating on reality TV. Vocalist KT Hall shares that the song was inspired by considering a stint on Channel 4’s First Dates and imagining what it might feel like to fall in love in a public fishbowl.

The release follows their return single “Riverhouse,” which earned Radio Wales A List status and BBC 6Music support, amassing more than 400 global radio plays in 60 days. Two years on from their Welsh Music Prize-nominated debut album Ask For Angela, CHROMA are stepping confidently into a bold new chapter.

Drummer Zac Mather calls the past few years a whirlwind, with the band taking their debut around the world before returning to the studio to craft what they see as their strongest material yet. Hall adds that the new songs push them further as writers, drawing from deeply personal themes including grief, heartbreak, and navigating life from a deindustrialised South Wales.

After recent live dates with PINS and a Music Venue Trust Grassroots Venues Tour with BILK, CHROMA have also been announced for FOCUS Wales 2026. More shows and new music are on the horizon as the trio head into an ambitious year ahead.

10 Datos Desconocidos Sobre El Pionero De La Salsa Willie Colon

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Willie Colon, el trombonista nacido en el Bronx que ayudó a definir el sonido de la salsa neoyorquina, falleció a los 75 años. Pionero, activista y figura clave de la cultura latina, transformó la música durante casi seis décadas. Más allá de sus éxitos, estos son 10 datos que quizás no conocías sobre la leyenda.

Comenzó tocando la trompeta antes de cambiar al trombón
De niño en el South Bronx, Colon aprendió trompeta a los 12 años. Luego cambió al trombón, inspirado por el potente sonido de Mon Rivera y Barry Rogers.

Firmó con Fania Records a los 15 años
Mientras otros adolescentes estaban en la escuela secundaria, Colon ya grababa discos. A los 17 lanzó El Malo, que vendió más de 300,000 copias.

Impulsó la imagen callejera en la salsa
Adoptó una estética fuerte y urbana en las portadas de sus álbumes mucho antes de que fuera común en el género.

Fue el primer artista latino en tocar en el Bataclan tras los ataques de 2015
En 2018, se presentó en el histórico teatro de París, marcando un momento simbólico de resistencia cultural.

Fue la primera persona de color en la junta nacional de ASCAP
En 1995 reemplazó a Stephen Sondheim en la junta nacional de ASCAP, abriendo camino en la industria musical.

Se graduó de la academia de policía en sus 60
En 2014 fue juramentado como Deputy Sheriff en Westchester County y más tarde ascendió a Deputy Lieutenant.

También actuó en cine y televisión
Participó en Vigilante, The Last Fight, un episodio de Miami Vice y la película It Could Happen to You.

Siembra vendió más de 3 millones de copias
Su colaboración de 1978 con Ruben Blades se convirtió en uno de los discos más vendidos en la historia de la salsa.

Formó parte de una delegación en el Vaticano junto a Bono y Quincy Jones
En 1999 participó en la iniciativa Jubilee 2000, que promovió la condonación de deudas para países en desarrollo.

Publicó más de 40 álbumes y vendió más de 30 millones de discos
Durante casi seis décadas, Willie Colon construyó uno de los catálogos más influyentes en la historia de la salsa.

10 Unknown Facts About Salsa Pioneer Willie Colon

Willie Colon, the Bronx-born trombonist who helped define the sound of New York salsa, has died at 75. A pioneer, activist and cultural force, Colon reshaped Latin music for nearly six decades. Beyond the hits and headlines, here are 10 lesser-known facts about the man who transformed salsa into a global movement.

He started on trumpet before switching to trombone
Growing up in the South Bronx, Willie Colon first picked up the trumpet at age 12. He later switched to trombone, inspired by the all-trombone sound of Mon Rivera and Barry Rogers, shaping the bold brass tone that defined his career.

He signed to Fania Records at just 15
While most teenagers were focused on school, Colon was already in the studio. By 17, he had recorded El Malo, which went on to sell more than 300,000 copies.

He helped create salsa’s “gangster” image
Colon leaned into a streetwise aesthetic on his album covers long before it became culturally common, reshaping how salsa artists could present themselves visually.

He performed at Paris’ Bataclan after the 2015 attacks
In 2018, Colon became the first Latin artist to perform at the historic venue following the terrorist attack, marking a powerful moment of cultural resilience.

He became the first person of color on ASCAP’s national board
In 1995, Colon replaced Stephen Sondheim on the ASCAP national board, breaking barriers within one of music’s most influential organizations.

He graduated from a police academy in his 60s
In 2014, Colon was sworn in as a Deputy Sheriff for Westchester County’s Department of Public Safety and later rose to Deputy Lieutenant.

He appeared in film and television
Beyond music, Colon acted in Vigilante, The Last Fight, an episode of Miami Vice titled Cuba Libre, and It Could Happen to You.

Siembra became one of the best-selling salsa albums ever
His 1978 collaboration with Ruben Blades sold more than 3 million copies and helped expand socially conscious themes within Latin music.

He joined Bono and Quincy Jones in a Vatican debt relief initiative
In 1999, Colon participated in the Jubilee 2000 delegation, advocating for global debt forgiveness that ultimately led to billions in relief for developing nations.

He released more than 40 albums and sold over 30 million records
Across nearly six decades, Willie Colon built one of the most influential and commercially successful catalogs in salsa history, reshaping the sound of New York and Latin music worldwide.