Australian post-punk quartet
Per Purpose explode in all directions on debut full-length
Circle the Stains, calling up both ghosts of the past and reflections of the state of contemporary punk over the course of the album's eight blasts of calculated noise. There are moments that call to mind the unhinged basement punk fervor of acts like
Tyvek,
Parquet Courts, and fellow Australians
Royal Headache, but
Per Purpose's style, while angular and winding, is far more controlled, with even the sloppy moments of guitar overspill sounding carefully constructed. "Kerbside Collection" begins with a grueling bassline akin to
the Birthday Party's best grooves, and moments later "Isn't It" comes across like a more aggressive version of
Brighten the Corners-era
Pavement. Not quite from the short-fast-loud school of punk, the tunes here can veer more toward the mediational, such as on the motorik rhythm and searching, sinewy guitar lines of the almost eight-minute-long "Made Mind." The song wanders through tense twists, with vocalist Glan Schenau sneering and slurring a slew of lyrics and a haunted violin offering some faint notes from somewhere in the distance. This thinking man's punk still retains all the excitement and fervor of any number of
Wire-worshiping bands, but offers up a more dynamic look at punk traditions, preferring to use the basic foundations of punk as a jumping-off point for more obtuse, experimental, and interesting ideas.