
Imagine Neutral Milk Hotel lending their rugged timbres to Muse, and you’ll get an idea of what The Last Post unleashed with 1999. It’s pure pre-millennium emo nostalgia that refuses to let the 21st century touch it. The rough edges remain gloriously intact, the imperfections sharpening its charm into something vital. The opening riff crashes in like an adrenaline flashback to a bedroom floor littered with CD cases and scribbled lyrics, before the track tears through any threat of being a paint-by-numbers revival.
There’s an almost desperate creative urgency rippling beneath the melody, a need to share the sweetness of euphoria when it’s tinged with that forlorn coming-of-age purity. It’s the kind of song that makes your chest ache with memories of simpler chaos, the kind that still carried meaning. The choruses erupt with the kind of lifeforce that makes you wish you could step straight back into that era, feeling everything too deeply before you knew what it meant to grow jaded. 1999 is revival zeal distilled into sound, crashing forward with enough melodic conviction to shake off the dust of irony and nostalgia fatigue.
Behind The Last Post is Logan Betz, the Central Pennsylvania multi-instrumentalist who finally dragged his basement-born anthems into the daylight. After years of keeping his songs locked away for some imagined epiphany, he’s made up for lost time with his LP, Wayfinder, co-produced with Logan Summey at Rock Mill Studio. It’s a record that captures everything Betz’s teenage heart held onto – sincerity, sensitivity, and that unkillable love for distortion, hooks, and hope.
1999 is now available on all major streaming platforms, including Spotify.
Review by Amelia Vandergast






