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Bed & Bugs

Obits

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Obits
Titel
Bed & Bugs
Label
Sub Pop
Artikel-Nr.
SPLP1058
EAN
0098787105810
Release-Date
13.09.2013
Musicstyle
Rock
Konfiguration
LP 1x
Lagerbestand
Lagernd und sofort lieferbar
19,99 € *
Colored Vinyl includes mp3 coupon! OBITS are a four-piece band who currently live in Brooklyn,... mehr
Produktinformationen "Bed & Bugs"
Colored Vinyl includes mp3 coupon! OBITS are a four-piece band who currently live in Brooklyn, NY, and whose music is probably considered an occupant of the rock music genre, specifically in the areas of garage, punk, surf, surf-punk, and garage-punk (though, not surf-garage). On this new album, they've also covered a song ("Besetchet") from volume 23 of the excellent "Ethiopiques" series; so much for tidy categorization. The album for which this clumsy biographical dispatch has been prepared is entitled "Bed & Bugs" and it is the third full-length album by OBITS, following their 2011 album "Moody, Standard and Poor", which itself followed their 2009 album "I Blame You", which we in the professional music industry refer to as the band's "debut". "Bed & Bugs" was recorded somewhere in Arlington, VA at an unnamed recording studio, simply and rather unhelpfully described as "upstairs." This recording was accomplished by Nikhil Ranade, and the resulting songs were later mixed, variously, by this same Nikhil Ranade as well as Eli Janney and Geoff Sanoff. On listening to "Bed & Bugs", the discerning listener may well note more than a passing similarity to such bands as HOT SNAKES, EDSEL, DRIVE LIKE JEHU, GIRLS AGAINST BOYS, PITCHFORK, possibly TELEVISION or the WIPERS. This is un-coincidental! With the exception of those last two, OBITS share members with all of those bands. Less flippantly: There are scenes and there are connections; trending hashtags and experiences. It's cool, these are not either/or propositions and there's no need to postulate any us vs. any them, the kids today and the back in my day. Much of what's best about any music, all art, across genres, within and beyond the latest craze, is the way it speaks to some definition of "us." Proving, as Obits sing in "Receptor," that "You ain't the world's lone receptor," is deeply valuable. Because we're all headed to the same place: me today, you tomorrow.
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