Homemade Satan - Handcrafted Gothic Decor for Halloween, Dark Aesthetic Home & Party Decorations - Perfect for Spooky Themed Events, Haunted Houses & Gothic Interior Design
Homemade Satan - Handcrafted Gothic Decor for Halloween, Dark Aesthetic Home & Party Decorations - Perfect for Spooky Themed Events, Haunted Houses & Gothic Interior Design

Homemade Satan - Handcrafted Gothic Decor for Halloween, Dark Aesthetic Home & Party Decorations - Perfect for Spooky Themed Events, Haunted Houses & Gothic Interior Design

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Description

Brandon Williams' second full-length record as Chastity, Home Made Satan, is a new direction for the Whitby, Ontario-native. It's an emotional and political concept album from the perspective of a young man who's spent too much time alone, inside, isolated from the world. It's about fear, and radicalization; an intense meditation on youth and extremism in an increasingly irrational and violent Western World. Williams, who produces all his own music, set out to create something with a strong cinematic nature. "It's so visual to me," he says. "I'm scoring this picture I have, and trying to get it as close to people's ears as it is in my mind." The new songs are gothier and poppier than ever, recalling '80s staples like The Cure and Siouxsie and the Banshees. Home Made Satan's got "a bit more eyeshadow" than 2018's genre-bending shoegaze-meets-post-hardcore Death Lust, and it's got pop-punk hooks for days. Home Made Satan, with it's lines about commies and American masochism and the Christian right, is meant to sing along to. And when you do, you'll mostly be singing about America. About hyper alienation and xenophobia, about the people who don't have access to community, how people get stuck in their own worlds and become afraid of what's outside. "It constantly feels like America is falling apart," Williams says, and that affects the whole world.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
The 2nd album from this Canadian band mixes a 90s indie rock feel with some sensitive pop moments—ringing in somewhere between Nirvana and Car Seat Headrest. Melancholic ballads erupt with angst and anxiety, giving way to some post-grunge rockers. There are a few good songs here and nothing really bad—but also nothing I haven’t heard before or need to here again. Honestly, the most intriguing thing about the album is the title. I think “Home Made Satan” could have a strong appeal to teenagers. Unfortunately, that stage of my life is long past.