Don’t let a German name, a French song title or an English album title distract you from the shared language that Die Spitz speak. It’s partly why Ava Schrobilgen, Chloe De St. Aubin, Ellie Livingston and Kate Halter can seamlessly interchange instruments and vocal duties, finding common ground in the musical mother tongue of Die Spitz. But first, the Austin quartet should remember their manners and teach us how to say hello.
Enter lead single Throw Yourself To The Sword, and its sledgehammer riff that could send Corey Taylor’s neck into a spasm. Blade in hand, the video tracks Ellie strutting around supermarkets and laundry rooms, demanding the listener ‘Give yourself to my sheath’ – although we’re not bending the knee to some bloodthirsty warlord. Instead, it's more of a universal call to arms, to inject strength and conviction into our own lives, or the world at large.
Herein lies the crux of Something To Consume: a thunderous, cathartic debut that remains subtly political and emotive while prioritising surface-level pandemonium. From top to bottom, it exists on the edge of a cliff.