Streaming illimitato
Ascolta subito questo album in alta qualità sulle nostre app
Inizia il mio periodo di prova e riproduci l'albumGoditi questo album sulle app Qobuz con il tuo abbonamento
AbbonatiGoditi questo album sulle app Qobuz con il tuo abbonamento
Download digitale
Acquista e scarica questo album in più formati, secondo le tue esigenze.
While they've spent most of their career playing to a small cult following rather than achieving the kind of underground success of fellow New York scenesters Sonic Youth or Swans, at their best the Bush Tetras were one of the most powerful and exciting acts to emerge from the downtown noise/punk community in the '80s. The bracing, wiry slash of Pat Place's guitar work took her playing with James Chance and moved into more aggressive and physical territory, and vocalist Cynthia Sley had a voice and an attitude that could stand up to Place's inspired clouds of dissonance. Thirty-eight years after the release of their outstanding debut single "Too Many Creeps," the Bush Tetras are not only still making music, they're as strong and as edgy as they've ever been, and their 2018 EP Take the Fall hardly sounds like the work of a band whose members are eligible to join AARP. Take the Fall features three-quarters of the original Bush Tetras lineup, with bassist Val Opielski sitting in for the late Laura Kennedy, and Place, Sley, and drummer Dee Pop sound no less forceful and a bit more precise in their fusion of throbbing rhythm and shards of guitar than they did in their salad days. The palpable urban malaise of tunes like "True Blue" and "Don't Stop It" confirm this band's take on the world is as fittingly cynical as ever, and the ferocity of the 78-second "Mouse" would put plenty of teenage bands to shame. At five songs and eighteen minutes, if Take the Fall has a flaw, it's that there ought to be more of it, but what's here is top-shelf noise rock from folks who know the ropes and know them well, and it's compelling proof the Bush Tetras are alive, well, and suitably furious in the 2010s.
© Mark Deming /TiVo
Al momento stai ascoltando degli estratti.
Ascolta oltre 100 milioni di brani con un abbonamento streaming illimitato.
Ascolta questa playlist e più di 100 milioni di brani con i nostri abbonamenti di streaming illimitato
A partire da 12,49€/mese
Bush Tetras, Artist, MainArtist
2018 Wharf Cat Records 2018 Wharf Cat Records
Bush Tetras, Artist, MainArtist
2018 Wharf Cat Records 2018 Wharf Cat Records
Bush Tetras, Artist, MainArtist
2018 Wharf Cat Records 2018 Wharf Cat Records
Bush Tetras, Artist, MainArtist
2018 Wharf Cat Records 2018 Wharf Cat Records
Bush Tetras, Artist, MainArtist
2018 Wharf Cat Records 2018 Wharf Cat Records
Approfondimenti
While they've spent most of their career playing to a small cult following rather than achieving the kind of underground success of fellow New York scenesters Sonic Youth or Swans, at their best the Bush Tetras were one of the most powerful and exciting acts to emerge from the downtown noise/punk community in the '80s. The bracing, wiry slash of Pat Place's guitar work took her playing with James Chance and moved into more aggressive and physical territory, and vocalist Cynthia Sley had a voice and an attitude that could stand up to Place's inspired clouds of dissonance. Thirty-eight years after the release of their outstanding debut single "Too Many Creeps," the Bush Tetras are not only still making music, they're as strong and as edgy as they've ever been, and their 2018 EP Take the Fall hardly sounds like the work of a band whose members are eligible to join AARP. Take the Fall features three-quarters of the original Bush Tetras lineup, with bassist Val Opielski sitting in for the late Laura Kennedy, and Place, Sley, and drummer Dee Pop sound no less forceful and a bit more precise in their fusion of throbbing rhythm and shards of guitar than they did in their salad days. The palpable urban malaise of tunes like "True Blue" and "Don't Stop It" confirm this band's take on the world is as fittingly cynical as ever, and the ferocity of the 78-second "Mouse" would put plenty of teenage bands to shame. At five songs and eighteen minutes, if Take the Fall has a flaw, it's that there ought to be more of it, but what's here is top-shelf noise rock from folks who know the ropes and know them well, and it's compelling proof the Bush Tetras are alive, well, and suitably furious in the 2010s.
© Mark Deming /TiVo
A proposito dell'album
- 1 disco(i) - 5 traccia(e)
- Durata totale: 00:17:30
- Artisti principali: Bush Tetras
- Etichetta: Wharf Cat Records
- Genere: Pop/Rock Rock Musica alternativa e indie
2018 Wharf Cat Records 2018 Wharf Cat Records
Migliorare le informazioni sugli albumPerché acquistare su Qobuz
-
Ascolta la tua musica in streaming o download
Acquista un album o una singola traccia. Oppure ascolta il nostro intero catalogo con i nostri abbonamenti streaming illimitati di alta qualità.
-
Zero DRM
I file scaricati ti appartengono, senza limiti d’uso. Puoi scaricarli tutte le volte che vuoi.
-
Scegli il formato più adatto a te
Scarica i tuoi acquisti in un'ampia varietà di formati (FLAC, ALAC, WAV, AIF ...) a seconda delle tue esigenze.
-
Ascolta i tuoi acquisti sulle nostre app
Scarica le app Qobuz per smartphone, tablet e computer e ascolta i tuoi acquisti dappertutto.