The Mekons - Existentialism (2016) Lossless

Artist: The Mekons
Title: Existentialism
Year Of Release: 2016
Label: Sin Publications
Genre: Post-Punk, Alternative, Indie Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 41:38 min
Total Size: 338 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Existentialism
Year Of Release: 2016
Label: Sin Publications
Genre: Post-Punk, Alternative, Indie Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 41:38 min
Total Size: 338 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Flowers Of Evil, Part 2
2. Skintrade
3. O Money
4. Bucket
5. Fear And Beer
6. Onion
7. Traveling Alone
8. Nude Hamlet
9. 1848 Now!
10. Simone On The Beach
11. The Cell
12. Remember
The Mekons have been around for nearly 40 years, and for most of that time, they've been evolving into an alt-country band. As a group, and in their solo and side projects, they've seemed to grow twangier every year, so it's easy to forget that they started out as a noisy agit-punk collective.
Existentialism is a sharp reminder of their roots away from roots music. This is no honky-tonk; this is fierce political cabaret — with, you know, fiddle and accordion and Hank Williams quotes. That's how they roll.
The Mekons explicitly reference historical events, recent and otherwise, on a number of tracks here. In "1848 Now!" They use the French rebellions of that year as a shout-out to once-and-future doomed uprisings, while "Beer and Fear" is a heart-cracking lament for a post-Brexit England. When the stories get more personal, as in "Travelling Alone" and "Simone on the Beach," they're individual narratives for troubling times.
Existentialism is theatrical, a fractured narrative of travelling through an ever-changing, often horrifying world. Taken as a whole, it's a rallying cry to be loud, radically vulnerable and "Naked as a new born babe," as they sing in "Skin Trade." After all, the album's not called "Nihilism." (Bloodshot)
Existentialism is a sharp reminder of their roots away from roots music. This is no honky-tonk; this is fierce political cabaret — with, you know, fiddle and accordion and Hank Williams quotes. That's how they roll.
The Mekons explicitly reference historical events, recent and otherwise, on a number of tracks here. In "1848 Now!" They use the French rebellions of that year as a shout-out to once-and-future doomed uprisings, while "Beer and Fear" is a heart-cracking lament for a post-Brexit England. When the stories get more personal, as in "Travelling Alone" and "Simone on the Beach," they're individual narratives for troubling times.
Existentialism is theatrical, a fractured narrative of travelling through an ever-changing, often horrifying world. Taken as a whole, it's a rallying cry to be loud, radically vulnerable and "Naked as a new born babe," as they sing in "Skin Trade." After all, the album's not called "Nihilism." (Bloodshot)