The world is fraught with calamity. A global catastrophe seems to always loom over humans, and when one is over, another appears. We humans are susceptible to dealing with loneliness, yearning, loss, or bad habits—deluding ourselves that everything is fine. All those fascinating complexities of the human condition make life a challenge, but also a gift—the fact that we can experience these things is a privilege.
The world is fraught with calamity. A global catastrophe seems to always loom over humans, and when one is over, another appears. We humans are susceptible to dealing with loneliness, yearning, loss, or bad habits—deluding ourselves that everything is fine. All those fascinating complexities of the human condition make life a challenge, but also a gift—the fact that we can experience these things is a privilege. Kaurna’s/Adelaide’s post-punk sextet Placement navigate these notions on their ambitious and deft debut album, Insect.
Placement aren’t your average rock band on Aussie turf, they reside on the cool side of the indie rock coin. The twangy, dissonant chord manipulation, delectably disaffecting vocals, and wounded woodwind bursts coalesce into a sound faithful to ‘90s alt-rock—think Sonic Youth meets Dry Cleaning. It’s a palette whose genesis resides over international waters, so to say its emergence on homegrown soil is exciting would be an understatement. Placement’s excellent, unpredictable sonic ideas are far from the speedy punk acts that currently overpower Naarm/Melbourne, so any punter into all of rock’s forms needs to welcome them with open arms.
Insect is full of interesting percussive stops and starts, and unsuspecting chord changes that pique ears even with casual listens. Additionally, each song contains thought-provoking lyricism probing into the aforementioned gripes with life, making a well-rounded, intellectual record. Opener ‘Inertia/Heavy Lids’, previously premiered in the magazine, best captures the Placement sound accessibly: off-kilter guitar tunings, cacophonic saxophone, and vocalist Malia Wearn’s deadpanning about breaking from a tedious routine show each element is carefully considered. No instrumental section is in stasis. ‘New Disease’ glides with a seamless groove from drummer Giuseppe Caporaso, as cool as those on Sonic Youth’s Rather Ripped. Meanwhile, Wearn’s melodic yet dry delivery acts as a rock for the whirring electric earworms courtesy of guitarist Alex Dearman, creating an authentic ‘90s noise rock hit for the current era.
Dearman, also a vocalist, brings a softer quality to these volatile instrumentals. If we take it back to Sonic Youth once more, he’s the Thurston Moore, whereas Wearn is Kim Gordon. Comparisons aside, Placement come into their own as the album progresses, excelling in the literary and auditory department. ‘Midnight New’, the first sung by Dearman, is a gripping exploration of loneliness in the early hours of the morning, held by a stern bass line from Kim Roberts and continually let loose with Stu Patterson’s relentless woodwinds. Title track ‘Insect’ is about fragile humanity, with hope that a new world will emerge and lead to beauty and growth—it begins tenderly until the band’s spacey noodling bubbles into sludgy, guitar riffage. The champion track is the closer ‘Collapse’, a tender duet with Wearn and Dearman conveying the simplest message: the struggle of letting someone go, heartbroken by significant loss, conceding to this tribulation. The touching notion is so felt when a distant clarinet opens the door to bittersweet, raucous guitars cutting through existential smog—it’s a feat to make an electric guitar this sad.
Placement deal with today’s anxieties in the best way they know how: through music. They build suffocating tension through towering layers but release it when you least expect it—those few moments of clarity are a chance to breathe, like briefly escaping life’s worries. Records like Insect are such a gift. You can point to musical likenesses for Placement just as I have, but their interplay, urgency, and immediacy set them apart. If this is their introduction, then they are truly vital.
Insect is out now on streaming platforms. You can follow Placement for updates over on Instagram.