Naïm Amor & Kid Congo Powers - Tucson Safari (2025) Hi-Res

Artist: Naïm Amor & Kid Congo Powers, Naïm Amor, Kid Congo Powers
Title: Tucson Safari
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: In The Red
Genre: Alternative, Garage Rock, Psychedelic Rock, Surf Rock
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-44.1kHz
Total Time: 35:21
Total Size: 82 / 229 / 406 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist: Title: Tucson Safari
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: In The Red
Genre: Alternative, Garage Rock, Psychedelic Rock, Surf Rock
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-44.1kHz
Total Time: 35:21
Total Size: 82 / 229 / 406 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Kid's Stroll (3:52)
02. Murder We Wrote (2:43)
03. Stoned By The Mile (2:49)
04. Ouch (4:01)
05. Showdown (3:21)
06. Surf Sirens (2:12)
07. Remembering The Witches Valley (3:41)
08. Ping Guitar Pong (4:36)
0https://isra.cloud/564uyl5sav1m9. Hypnotized (4:31)
10. Tucson Safari (3:45)
When Paris-born/Tucson-based musician Naïm Amor (Amor Belhom Duo, Howe Gelb, John Parish, …) met garage rock legend Kid Congo Powers (The Gun Club, The Cramps, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, …), sparks were inevitable. Tucson Safari is the sound of those sparks catching fire—a sun-baked collision of cinematic rockabilly and noir surf, of desert twang and analog electronics. Amor started by blending garage-y guitar tones with drum machines and bass synthesizers, inspired by Link Wray’s grit and Suicide’s mechanical pulse. Inviting Kid Congo to trade riffs turned the project into something wilder—an electric conversation between two singular stylists.
Across ten songs—largely instrumental explorations—Amor’s melodic shimmer and harmonic curiosity twist around Kid’s unmistakable fuzzy slides and swampy swagger. How cool would it be if eccentric tunes like Stoned By The Mile, Ouch, or Ping Guitar Pong were featured in a movie? For now, I suppose they would also make good ringtones, but that would be shortchanging the genius of their creators. This isn’t just a meeting of minds; it’s a duel, a dance, and a desert hallucination captured in darkly groovy guitar art.
Across ten songs—largely instrumental explorations—Amor’s melodic shimmer and harmonic curiosity twist around Kid’s unmistakable fuzzy slides and swampy swagger. How cool would it be if eccentric tunes like Stoned By The Mile, Ouch, or Ping Guitar Pong were featured in a movie? For now, I suppose they would also make good ringtones, but that would be shortchanging the genius of their creators. This isn’t just a meeting of minds; it’s a duel, a dance, and a desert hallucination captured in darkly groovy guitar art.