The Woggles - Time Has Come (2024)

  • 30 Jun, 16:22
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Artist:
Title: Time Has Come
Year Of Release: 2024
Label: Wicked Cool Records
Genre: Garage Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 35:40
Total Size: 81.8 / 261 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Flesh Hammer (2:29)
2. Her Majesty's Pleasure (3:19)
3. Telling Me Lies (2:57)
4. Do The Slug (3:11)
5. Mr. Last Chance (3:09)
6. Time Has Come (3:03)
7. Hole In My Heart (2:27)
8. Trouble Loves Me (2:50)
9. Never Get Over Me (3:07)
10. Toad In The Hole (2:51)
11. Wearing On My Soul (2:22)
12. Nothing More To Say (4:01)

For a band to not only last beyond 30 years together but keep scaling more imposing heights, it’s going to need a sense of purpose. In the case of The Woggles, the seasoned garage rockers passed that milestone with a renewed rallying cry to move ever forward! The Woggles now feature a two-guitar attack with Graham Day (The Prisoners, Solar Flares, Thee Mighty Caesars) and Shane Pringle (Tiger! Tiger!, Bad Spell) on the 6 strings with Shane occasionally doubling up on saxophone! The band is touring in support of the new single Flesh Hammer b/w The Witch out on Wicked Cool Records (Steven Van Zandt’s label), inspired by the late guitarist, Jeff Walls AKA Flesh Hammer. Both sides of the 7" feature Pat Beers from The Schizophonics on lead guitar. “The band is not as much an institution as a way of life,” says frontman “The Professor” Mighty Manfred. “The main thing is to keep swimming, cause the shark has got to keep moving.” The band continues to feature the sock-it-to-them rhythm section of bassist Buzz Hagstrom and drummer Dan Eletxro, both also sometime members of savage English rockers Graham Day & The Gaolers. “Alan Freed once said that ‘Rock and roll is a river of music that has absorbed many streams,’” quotes Manfred. “The Woggles drink from its many tributaries, from early rock and roll and R&B to ’60s garage rock, British Invasion, ’60s soul and forward.” Fusing pure rock and soul from vintage sources into their own singular sound, The Woggles
lay it down hard and loud but with more majesty than recklessness. Their beats and riffs are as strident as Manfred’s swagger and strut onstage. Having played in the past with Johnny Cash, Link Wray, The Zombies and nearly every garage rock group worth its salt, as Meredith Ochs wisely advised on NPR All Songs Considered: “Go see a Woggles show. It will change your life.”
FFO The Love Me Nots, The Fleshtones, The Len Price 3, The Chesterfield Kings.


Many thanks for Flac!!