For Ontario alternative rock act Chastity, evolution has been about taking off the mask. On last year’s full-length album Death Lust, the band’s music was drenched in bristling distortion and a mordant sneer. But for their new album, Home Made Satan, mastermind Brandon Williams steered their tone in a clearer direction, channeling the jangling, peaked sounds of acts like The Cure and Hole. The result is a record that still comes from a heart full of rage, but drops any sort of veneer and hits the listener with brutal honesty.Chastity’s new video, Flames, plays with this concept by showing what happens when everyday people remove — and put on — the costumes they wear every day. The video acts as prequel to Chastity’s two p...