Th' Losin Streaks ‎– This Band Will Self​-​Destruct In T​-​Minus (2018) Vinyl

  • 12 Apr, 20:39
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Artist:
Title: This Band Will Self​-​Destruct In T​-​Minus
Year Of Release: 2018
Label: Slovenly Recordings
Genre: Garage Rock, Punk, Psychedelic Rock
Quality: Flac (tracks, 16/44,1) / Flac (tracks, 24/96)
Total Time: 38:13
Total Size: 295/953 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. (This Man Will Self-Destruct In) T-Minus
02. Trouble You Find
03. To Die For
04. You Can't Keep A Good Man Down
05. Time Has Come
06. Order Of The Day
07. You'll Never Know
08. Room And Board
09. I Don't Care What You Do
10. Genevieve
11. My Disease
12. Falling Rain
13. Too Late
14. Untitled

Line-up::
Bass Guitar – Stan Tindall
Drums – Matt K. Shrugg
Lead Guitar – Mike Farrell (4)
Rhythm Guitar – Tim Foster (2)

It’s been 14 years between albums for Th’ Losin Streaks, but when a band so fully inhabits a bygone era—in this case, the punk-anticipating “freakbeat” sound of late-’60s England—a decade and a half is chump change.

And considering that the Sacramento quartet actually broke up in 2010, any new material at all is something of a bonus. The group’s uncertain lease on life informs the title of their new LP, This Band Will Self-Destruct In T-Minus, which mirrors the spot-on garage revelry of 2004’s Sounds of Violence. These are bash-and-thrash anthems delivered with enough burning urgency to sound genuinely threatening.

While there is an obscure cover in The Jagged Edge’s “You Can’t Keep a Good Man Down”—one of two tracks sung with surprising melodic appeal by wild-card drummer Matt K. Shrugg—you don’t need to be a ’60s completist to appreciate this record. Anyone with a passing familiarity of early Kinks, Troggs, and Beatles rave-ups should be right on board from the opening title track, which announces the band’s blurted punch amid bruising drum fills. It’s the longest song here, at just over three-and-a-half minutes, with a chorus that’s among the album’s more restrained moments.

From there, Shrugg, lead guitarist Mike Farrell, bassist Stan Tindall, and singer/guitarist Tim Foster ratchet up their tug-of-war between fine-tuned precision and all-out chaos. Witness the squalling guitar solo that fuzzes its way out of “To Die For,” or the surf-damaged start and surprise bass solo of the Who-ish “Time Has Come.” Reportedly the only album that producer Chris Woodhouse (Oh Sees, Ty Segall) agreed to record this year, T-Minus peaks with frantic closer “Too Late,” connecting every thrilling dot between mod rock and hardcore punk.


  • mufty77
  •  13:53
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Many thanks for HD tracks.