AUSTIN CHRONICLE 1
Since Memphis is probably the
new Brooklyn, it makes sense that the sounds coming from the South
are dirty and amplified. River City Tanlines singer/guitarist
Alicja Trout's former duties in the gritty Memphis quartet Lost
Sounds have prepared her for the equally chaotic Tanlines. A series
of seven inches has served as a sampling until Dirtnap put them
all on CD last fall. Fry. Audra Schroeder
AUSTIN CHRONICLE 2
Memphis River City Tanlines have taken booze-infused punk and flying-V guitars and created a new definition of the Dirty South. Led by guitarist and singer Alicja Trout, formerly of Memphis space punks the Lost Sounds, the trio pumps out soul-soaked slabs that barely reach three minutes before coming up for air. Their first four 7-inches have just been released on CD, courtesy of Portlands Dirtnap Records, so feel the burn. Locals Nervous Hospital, Hotrails, Tokyo Nites, and Flash Boys open.
FLIGHT 13
Neues, heissen Eisen auf Dirtnap aus der Geburtsstätte des Blues Memphis. Nach drei grossen US-Touren ist die Formation um Alicja Trout zusammen mit John Bondes und Terrance Bishop (zuletzt bei R.L. Burnside, Tearjerkers, ..) in aller Munde. Ihr Sound reicht dabei von 80er Hardcore über Garagerock bis zu Pop. Das klingt so unglaublich wie es tatsächlich klingt. Anchecken! * DirtnapNeues, heissen Eisen auf Dirtnap aus der Geburtsstätte des Blues Memphis. Nach drei grossen US-Touren ist die Formation um Alicja Trout zusammen mit John Bondes und Terrance Bishop (zuletzt bei R.L. Burnside, Tearjerkers, ..) in aller Munde. Ihr Sound reicht dabei von 80er Hardcore über Garagerock bis zu Pop. Das klingt so unglaublich wie es tatsächlich klingt. Anchecken! * Dirtnap
GREEN HELL
Ich bleibe dabei, daß alles an
dem Alicja Trout beteiligt ist wirklich Hand und Fuß hat!
Egal ob bei den Lost Sounds, Destruction Unit, ihren zahllosen
anderen Projekten oder jetzt bei den River City Tanlines, die
kleine Frau versprüht Originalität und Energie wie kaum
ein(e) andere(r). Daß sie sich dabei musikalisch kaum festlegt
spricht nur für sie und macht auch "I'm your negative",
das "richtige" Debüt der River City Tanlines nach
der vorangegangenen 7" Compilation, so spannend und einzigartig.
Das Trio vermischt verzerrten Garage Punk, 80er Hardcore ("Animal
life"), feisten 70ies Rock und sogar die ein oder andere
Prise (Sixties) Power Pop ("Lookin' for a line"), New
Wave ("Gimme all your cuts") und Rockabilly ("Cryin',
bleedin', dyin'") und schafft es dennoch ganz unverwechselbar
und eigen zu klingen. "I'm your negative" ist alles
in allem eine nur ganz schwer zu kategorisierende Platte, die
man unmöglich in eine Schublade stecken kann, um sie Review-technisch
an den Mann zu bringen - aber gerade das macht sie so gut!
INCOGNITO
Zusammenstellung, nun das erste "richtige" Album von dieser Supergroup bestehend aus ALICJA TROUT Gesang und Gitarre (LOST SOUNDS, BLACK SUNDAY, DESTRUCTION UNIT, FITTS, NERVOUS PATTERNS, MOUSEROCKET), TERRENCE BISHOP Bass und Backgroundgesang (RL BURNSIDE, MR AIRPLANE MAN, TEARJERKERS), und FERREL BONDS (RL BURNSIDE, DALE HAWKINS). Die aggressiveren Songs wie etwa das treibende, mitreißende "Animal Life" erinnern von den Songstrukturen noch etwas an die LOST SOUNDS, haben aber ohne Keyboard und mit größerer Betonung auf den Gitarren-Sound einen stärkeren Punk Rock Touch. Dazu kommen poppige New Wave Punk Nummern wie etwa "Cryin' Bleedin' Dyin'" oder "My Reflection", sowie mit "Lookin' For A Line" ein perfekter New Wave Powerpop Hit. Insgesamt erinnert das Album an eine Mischung aus JOAN JETT, LOST SOUNDS ohne Keyboard, und den SONS OF CYRUS. (DIRTNAP)
LEFT OF THE DIAL:
With a meld of Joan Jett and the Paybacks (meaning equally volatile and catchy as hell), the River City Tanlines take the somewhat laconic backbeat of Southern stylistics and toss it asunder with lowdown dirty whiskey garage rock. Alicja Trout is best known for her bout of synth-punk disaster in Lost Sounds (whose sound does reappear a bit on My Reflection!), legends of their own no-time zone, while her rhythm section of John Bonds and Terrence Bishops has tampered with Fat Possum plunderers RL Burnside and T Model Ford , though these 15 year veterans of Memphis madness today play with Jack Oblivian and the Tennessee Tearjerkers. Im Your Negative has all that lack of sheen and shine that we expect from Memphis; its gruff, rollicking, and knee tapping too, as if no matter how rejected and dejected Trout may be, she aint gonna stand still with hips of concrete.
Theres always a true rocknroll sway ready
to save the day, while In My Mode Rollin is more AC/DC
(earliesh period) territory, all wide swaths of guitar mashing
and gnashing and slow-paced, mid-period Runaways delivery that
make teenage doldrums feel like big diesel engines. Her flying
V guitar is the perfect metaphor for ruckus right here, and Shoot
the Eye Out follows the leader, though you can feel the
Flamin Groovies meets Redd Kross tambourine pep add some
layers of jukebox classicism, hinting of sweet whiffs of cheerleader
hustle. On the other hand, Animal Life is short, atavistic,
and tastes like charcoal on the tongue. Its searing and
brandishes tough skin and snarls. Cryin Bleedn,
Dyin is a soft-core cover, a 1960s garage gland that
would seem at home on any Thee Headcoatees album; its slightly
au-go-go, slightly slinky, and slightly ramshackle. Meanwhile,
Whenever I Rot is pure unfiltered noise-o-rama and
tussles with speed and fury as if every muscle was wrestling with
a dragon in the form of an El Camino. Still, the breakdown at
the end reveals the old-fashioned rocknroll triumph
of the will, the winking Fonzie inside us all.
The Donnas-esque (dont hate me for saying that!) Looking
for a Line is tellingly mustered-up, barely repressed pop
full of understated relationship woe and innuendo (please
dont try to hold my hand/oh please dont touch me can
you understand?) that reveals the heart as a region where
finding the right language at the right time becomes as weird
and difficult as finding a guitar pic in a haystack. Bouncy become
bigger on Not Gonna Think About it Anymore as innocence
trumps vendetta and pain and brazen bursts are replaced by almost
kitschy postcard shuffles. However, that hiatus is brief because
Drowning Dreams unfurls like a haunted wasteland of
suffering. The mood is razory and wrecked, and it sounds like
Trout would rather huff paint and eat engine grease on fire than
kiss and make up. Its scary, but even this onslaught is
tempered as it segues into Adam and the Ant woos and harmonies
of the final cut Gimme All Your Cuts, which makes
the whole outing momentous and less roughneck than the beginning
suggests.
This is holy water to those who believe that raw rock should be
both girly and grrly, a stab at sonic dreams that plunder some
clichés while embracing others. It is not wholly new or
upstart, but it is true and tried, like an emblem of whats
best inside the germ of rocknroll.
Worth three potato chips.
MAXIMUM ROCK N ROLL:
Probably my fave Alicja Trout side-band (or is it a side band now?). If you came expecting the cold-wave synth of the LOST SOUNDS, you got the wrong band. What makes this one different from the other femme fronted garage rockers is the pedigree of the members who have done stints with RL BURNSIDE and LOVE among others. While their sound is rooted in punk rock traditions like a stripped down garage AVENGERS, they have a bunch of 60's pop and even 70's rock (think JOAN JETT) sensibilities. The songwriting is masterful, playing tight as fuck, and recording near perfect. I've been hard pressed to find fault with this label, and this release ups the ante. I could see this band blowing up WHITE STRIPES-style - keep 'em peeled. (TB)
MEMPHIS COMMERCIAL APPEAL
....5. Flip Side Kid, Jack-O & the Tennessee Tearjerkers (Sympathy for the Record Industry) and 6. Im Your Negative, River City Tanlines (Dirtnap Records). Terrance "T-Money" Bishop, bass player for both the Tanlines and the Tearjerkers, recently elucidated the difference between the guiding forces behind each of these bands. Tanlines frontwoman Alicja Trout has had to work incredibly hard to get to where she is, he explained, while Jack Yarber of the Tearjerkers often seems to toss off songs so easily as to seem haphazard.
For Trout all the hard work has resulted in the best work of her career. Finally shaking free of the association of her male collaborators in bands such as the Clears and the Lost Sounds, Im Your Negative finds the punk rocker blossoming as a songwriter and a guitarist in her own right. Meanwhile, Yarber, no stranger to punk through his association with the Oblivians and other bands, finds himself gently stretching his sound on Flip Side Kid. Working alone and with a revolving cast of players, Yarber dabbles in country, zydeco, and Ennio Morricone, revealing a greatly under-recognized songwriting talent beneath all the garage noise.
MEMPHIS FLYER
Over the last decade, singer and guitar player Alicja Trout has exchanged the sleek black S&M style she cultivated with revisionist new-wavers the Clears for a more casual, less manicured look while becoming the most versatile and prolific female performer in the great-big-boy's club of Memphis rock-and-roll. With I'm Your Negative, she's done that which is nearly impossible: making a nuanced studio recording that loses very little of the sweaty garage-punk energy that made the band's previous recordings so much fun. "Looking for a Line" is a viciously addictive ditty, and it never hurts having John "Bubba" Bonds and Terrence Bishop, Memphis' tightest rock-and-roll rhythm section, keeping your time. -- Ch
NEW YORK WASTE
Get your stomp on...RIVER CITY TANLINES sends Im Your Negative - Runaway rock-n-roll that knows how to treat you right, songs that deliver from the word go. Waste rock is on the rise and these cats are on fire.ris Davis
NOW WAVE 1
Until the River City Tanlines began to put out records, I didn't like the Alicja bands a lot outside of the Lost Sounds. But with this band, I can't say that anymore. After putting out lots of really cool 7-inches, now they have put out an even more awesome LP.
If you have heard the singles, you know what you will find: rockin' punk with lots of pop/indie feelings and some really fast hardcore songs soundin' very rock. The slow songs are just near the perfection, I really love 'em, especially "Lookin for a Line" (at this point, my fave song of the year by far). And the hardcore songs are also really good, but I think they haven't the correct sound, very rock near metal for me, as songs they are good but the slow songs are miles beyond the hardcore stuff. I can understand that for live shows they are very cool and even on record to give it variety, but I don't dig the hardcore songs that much. If the complete album were like the slow songs, I think it would be the best album of the year for sure. But since it isn't that, it's just totally fuckin' awesome. One of the best releases Dirtnap has ever put out, Avengers/Bags total fans like me will love it.
NOW WAVE 2
I'm rarely correct about such things, but I'm Your Negative sure smells like a potential million seller to me. And being a person who's always believed that good music deserves to be heard by the masses, I sure hope I'm right. Perhaps I'm overestimating the tastes and desires of the music-buying public. Perhaps today's modern rock airwaves are closed off to any band not tailor made for the pseudo goth, nu metal, mall-punk, and emo-core market niches. But the River City Tanlines definitely have the sound, the songs, and the appeal needed to blow up huge in the rock world. And just as importantly, they've got a real star in Alicja Trout.
Trout (Lost Sounds, Black Sunday, Mouserocket, Clears, Fitts) has got a real good voice, can play the hell out of the guitar, and demonstrates the ability to excel across a wide variety of musical styles. And with a mug ideal for magazine covers and music videos, she could be an international sensation. I'm Your Negative offers up everything from smokin' Memphis rock n' roll (the title track) to gorgeous indie-pop ("Not Gonna Think About It Anymore") to punky hard rock ("In My Mode Rollin'") to blistering hardcore punk ("Animal Life") to radio-friendly alt-rock ("Lookin' For a Line") to raging '92 grunge ("Drowning Dreams"). Mix it all together, and you've got yourself a damn good rock album.
"I'm Your Negative" is as good a rock n' roll song as you'll hear all year (or any other year, for that matter!). It rides a relentless bluesy riff into a knockout chorus full of slashing guitars and shout-along lyrics. Rhythm players John Bonds and Terrance Bishop have worked with some of the best in the business (RL Burnside, T-Model Ford, Dale Hawkins, Fat Possum's Kenny Brown, Jack Oblivian's Tearjerkers, Mr. Airplane Man's Margaret Garret), and they're on fire on this track. On the strength of Trout's burning vocal and the trio's electrifying R & B/punk attack, "I'm Your Negative" rates up there with the best of the Bellrays or Detroit Cobras. If you don't like this song, you don't like rock n' roll. The dreamy, beautiful "Not Gonna Think About It Anymore" is equally great in a completely opposite way. "My Reflection" could be a massive crossover radio smash -- it combines progressive indie/post-punk stylings with formidable pop hooks and that all-important hard edge. And if you feel like rocking out, it doesn't get any better than "In My Mode Rollin'". It's great hard rockin' punk that gets me banging my head every time.
I suppose the downside to an "eclectic" album like I'm Your Negative is that there aren't more songs like the title track. I really could have gone for one or two more balls-out rockers (especially in place of the more generic hardcore numbers). But that's only a minor complaint, and I think the majority of music fans are more likely to take to could-be hits like "Lookin' For a Line" and "My Reflection". If I'm drivin' in my car a few months from now and hear one of the above on the local modern rock station, I won't be shocked.
---Lord Rutledge
October 26, 2006
OX 1
In Ox #68 besprach ich noch ihre 7"- und Outtake-Zusammenstellung,
jetzt ist das erste Album der RIVER CITY TANLINES raus, der aktuellsten
musikalischen Inkarnation der Alicja Trout, die hiermit ihre synthielastige
Phase - mittels LOST SOUNDS bestens dokumentiert - hinter sich
gelassen hat und hier auf Tasteninstrumente weitestgehend verzichtet.
Stattdessen ist purer Rock'n'Roll angesagt, straighter als bei
allen vorherigen Bands, nur hier und da ("Animal life")
bricht die alte Aggressivität durch, der wüste Minimal-Trash-Pop,
während an anderer Stelle durchaus auch mal RUNAWAYS und
GO-GO'S grüßen lassen ("Shoot the eye out"),
ja es sogar richtig-schmusig balladesk wird ("Cryin' bleedin'
dyin'", im Original von WHEELS ON FIRE). Die große
Stärke des Albums ist jedoch, dass es so abwechslungsreich
ist, dass Mrs. Trout und Begleitung (Margaret Garret von MR. AIRPLANE
MAN, John Bonds und Terrance Bishop, die auch schon mit RL Burnside,
T-Model Ford und den TEARJERKERS gespielt haben) nicht den Fehler
begehen, eine Ladung fast identischer Songs abzuliefern, die nur
in ihrer Gesamtheit auffallen, aber nicht durch individuelles
Songwriting. Und so sind "Whenever I rot", "Lookin'
for a line" oder "My reflection" einfach exzellente
Rock/Pop-Nummern, die hängen bleiben. Mehr davon! (30:41)
(8) (Joachim Hiller)
OX 2
Alicja Trout ist ein irres Arbeitstier
und hat in den letzten Jahren mehr Bands gehabt als so mancher
grau gewordene Rock'n'Roller in seinem ganzen Leben: LOST SOUNDS,
BLACK SUNDAY, DESTRUCTION UNIT, FITTS, MOUSEROCKET und wie sie
alle hießen. Und eben RIVER CITY TANLINES, mit denen sie
im September auch auf Europatour war. Unter diesem Namen hat sie
zusammen mit Bassist Terrence (unter anderem RL Burnside, MR.
AIRPLANE MAN) und Bubba John (der auch für RL Burnside trommelte)
drei Singles aufgenommen, die wegen geringer Auflage von 300 bis
700 Stück natürlich längst ausverkauft sind, aber
nun von Dirtnap auf CD wiederveröffentlicht wurden, ergänzt
um drei neue, unveröffentlichte Tracks. Wer mit Alicja Trout
kantige, ultranoisige Elektro-Punk-Nummern à la LOST SOUNDS
verbindet, dürfte von RCT überrascht sein, denn - angesichts
der Mitmusiker überrascht das allerdings nicht wirklich -
hier gibt's ganz basalen, knarzigen, angebluesten Rock'n'Roll
mit teils recht sweeten Melodien: Alicja kann auch nett singem
wenn sie will, siehe etwa das grandios betitelte "Bummer
in the summer". Alicja-Fans wissen, was sie bekommen, denke
ich - die Dame ist wirklich eine Ausnahmeerscheinung in der Männerdomäne
LoFi-Punkrock. (33:03) (8) (Joachim Hiller)
RAZORCAKE
Smoke after the fireworks; hanging in the air like a specter. Thats what this album sounds like: smoke in your clothes, eyes burning, lingering notes drifting through the air, slow to dissipate. And although it doesnt come right out and scream all the way through like the quiver of released and previously collected singles, the results remarkable. Its a slow-burning smolder that shows age as maturity, which, when it does explode, is all the more powerful (think of the tension of the burning fuse). Joan Jetts not dead, but Alicja Trout is my generations Joan Jett: an undeniable talent driving a force behind whatever marketing ploy could theoretically be foisted upon her. At the core, shes a consummate, passionate musician. This is music for mature rockers who dont devalue youth nor fake their age and its for fans of bands as widely scattered as the Bassholes, Top Ten, Big Star, Mouserocket, Roky Erickson, and, well, great rock music. Todd Taylor (Dirtnap)
RHINO
.....River City Tanlines is a more straightforward band thing. Alicja Trout's ever-present '80s herky-jerkys splatter through a power pop groove, straddling Devo and Nikki And The Corvettes. But the crackling energy and Trout's multi-tracked vocal ring give everything a fresh sting.
ROCKSOUND
Continuing a lengthy lineage of scuzzed-up guitar-slinging American garage rockers, Memphis' River City Tanlines will be infintely more exhilarating experienced down the local Spit & Sawdust instead of via tinny CD fascimile. Still, cute frontwoman Alicja A Trout should keep boys and fans of daft names chirpy for now
ROCTOBER
If you're fishing the greatest Trout (Alicja that is) in rock n' roll then cast your bait towards this killer CD. In a world that is a better place this would be the band on TRL that every kid in America was screaming for. But if the world was a better place, I guess punk garage trash rock wouldn't sound this vicious.
SHANGRI-LA
River City Tanlines' newest tunes. They are gettin' a tougher on this one on Dirtnap. Bubba And T-Money get it all wrapped up tighter, the guitar is gettin louder. Good stuff. 11 tunes from one of Memphis' premier punk n' roll three pieces. Ya dont need anymore folks than that, ya know?
7INCH SLAM
.....Not only do the ladies in our pathetic lives make sure we've got plenty of spicy food available for football games, they also run some pretty awesome bands. The River City Tanlines out of Memphis, TN, are a perfect example. These guys came to Pittsburgh last winter to play a poorly attended show, then hung out with all of us rock n roll jag offs. The two fellas in the band fit in perfectly with us, we watched football, drank beers, and schemed on chicks. The two of them are southern fried shitbags of the highest order, and somehow, Alicja Trout, formerly of the Lost Sounds, puts up with them. The Tanlines have a new Dirtnap LP called I'm Your Negative which picks up with their brand of Memphis garage punk right where their 7"s left off.
SLUG
River City Tanlines = The Runaways + New Bomb Turks
Straight outta Memphis, the River City Tanlines continue in
the grand
tradition of bands with the Blank-City-Blanks name format to deliver
some competent, boring garage punk. Lead singer and guitarist
Alicja Trout tries
her hardest to pull off the bad girl, rocker chick persona, but
her vocals don't have enough of a punch and the music just isn't
energetic enough. The
title track is the most lively of the bunch, and it feels like
there's some hidden energy underneath the formulaic structure,
but the potential is never
tapped. Throughout the album this feeling prevails as the glimmers
of hope found on "Animal Life" and "Drowning Dreams"
are quickly trampled by the
relative tedium of the rest of the album. It serves as pretty
good background music, and the Tanlines would probably make a
fine opening band,
but I'm Your Negative is missing the energy that can transform
a mediocre album into an awesome album. ­ Ricky Vigil
SUBURBAN VOICE
Another band including Alicja Trout (Lost Sounds, etc) and a wide-ranging
array of materialfoot stomping boogie/bluesy rock on the
first two tracks, taking a poppier direction for Shoot The
Eye Out and No Gonna Think About It Anymore,
dabbling in hardcore (not very well) for Whenever I Rot
and adding a nervier edge for My Reflection and Drowning
Dreams. A lack of predictability and, while not every song
is a successthe Richard Hell-ish strut of Cryin
Bleedin Dyin drags a bittheres some
solid fired-up rock here.
TERMINAL BOREDOM
Much anticipated debut LP from Alicja, Bubba, and T-Money, coming in the wake of a string of three-and-a half great singles, and it lives up to expectations and then some. The title track and "In My Mode Rollin'" (from the split with The Intellectuals) are perfect examples of the straight-ahead hard guitar rock they mastered on the singles. Then there's more punk-sounding stuff: "Animal Life" has a breakneck pace hiding a deep hook that sideswipes you in transit and "Whenever I Rot" sounds like Alicja fronting the 'Earth A.D.'-era Misfits (with a better guitar player). Quite a few tunes have what could be considered a maninstream/crossover appeal: hard-to-not-like anthems like "Shoot the Eye Out!" and "My Reflection" (which actually has some slight synth on it, which I'll have to forgive). There's even some playful indie-poprocking ("Not Gonna Think About it Anymore") and an undeniably strong finish with the sweeping one-two combo of "Drowning Dreams"/"Gimme All Your Cuts". It's no secret Alicja is a great songwriter, and here she uses all of the tools at her disposal, including a rhythm section rock-solid enough to build a house on. Eleven tracks, with only one real bummer in the bunch, the LP extends the reach of the band with fantastic results. I had high hopes for this record coming in, and I left more than satisfied, even if it isn't as raw as the singles. Scum stats: plenty to go around, but the first 100 mailorder copies were on beautiful orange vinyl.(RK)
3RD GENERATION NATION
Welch eine angenehme Ueberraschung! Das Trio aus Memphis hinterlaesst auf der ersten gemeinsamen Produktion augenblicklich einen bleibenden Eindruck. Dabei sind die Bandmitglieder eigentlich in anderen Bands zu Hause, Saengerin und Gitarristin Alicja Trout kommt von the LOST SOUNDS bzw. BLACK SUNDAY, Bassist Terrence Bishop und Schlagzeuger John Bonds spielen zeitweilig bei RL BURNSIDE, T-MODEL FORD und JACK OBLIVIAN´S TEARJERKERS mit. Die 11 Tracks spruehen nur so vor musikalischer Abwechselung, kein Song klingt so wie der andere. Man hat das Gefuehl, das sich das Trio zu keiner Sekunde festlegen moechte und so spielen sie voellig ungezwungen und frei von der Leber weg einen kleinen Hit nach dem anderen. Bei den anderen Combos bewegen sie sich hauptsaechlich im Garagen-Noise-Sound. Das ist bei den River City Tanlines gluecklicherweise doch etwas anders verlagert. Hier gibt es zu dem knochentrockenen snotty Beat-Punk eine ganze Reihe an ausgelassenen BubbleGum-Melodien zuhoeren, gepaart mit einigen bemerkenswerten New Wave-Ausfluegen. Und Frau Trout kann ja wirklich alles singen! In jeder Stimmlage anzutreffen. Kein Problem! Das macht sie mit links! Toll!!! Solche Bands gibt es nicht mehr alle Tage, und dafuer auch die volle Sternchenzahl! Das muss man einfach mal so annehmen und anerkennen.
THIS IS ROCK N ROLL
Las mierdas de la vida... estaba escribiendo una crítica la mar-de-bonita pero líe el taco con el teclado y se me borró. Bueno... ahí va una más corta:
Tras un tremendo recopilatorio de singles también en Dirtnap los RCT se lanzan de pleno ya con un pedazo de LP que me gusta un poco más que los singles. En el mismo plan como unos Avengers más rockeros con canciones más lentas (un poco indie incluso) y otras muy hardcore, como "Animal Life" o "Whenever i Rot" se despachan el album. Mi favorita es "Lookin for a Line" que se ha convertido en una de las mejores canciones que ha hecho esta chavala. Increíble.. mis favoritas en general son las lentas pero las 2 de hardcore que he mencionado son buenas la verdad y sobre todo en directo tienen que molar. Pues nada, si no tienes problemas porque hagan buenos solos (quizá algo largos pero son buenos, no están mal hechos, tienen unas melodías impresionantes.. en especial el del pepinazo "I'm your Negative) y sean algo rockerillos te encantarán para que te hagas una idea la situación no anda demasiado lejos de canciones de los Lost Sounds como "Clones don't Love" (mi favorita del cuarto), pero sin sintetizadores claro.
UNDER THE VOLCANO ZINE
Lately my meandering emotional status has unsettingly veered from hopeless melancholic introspection to seething anger-wrecked tumult. I have not a clue as to the reason behind these physically exhausting mood swings (a secret change of ingredients in my favorite beer perhaps?), but I do know that the River City Tanlines have provided me with a sudden burst of tingly insurmountable joy. Im Your Negative is the euphoric, heart-stopping essence of Rock n Roll snugly wrapped in a sugary sweet quilt of Power Pop resplendence and abundantly splashed with a rhythmically delicious topping. Alicja Trouts sassy schoolgirl vocals are perfectly and energetically complemented by her uncanny ability to exorcise golden demons out of the guitar, all the while firmly reiterating my belief that Miss Trout is the premier singer/songwriter/musician of the millennial era. Terrence Bishop skillfully flicks the taut strings of his bass as if he were Picasso corrupting a blank canvas with a vibrant array of dazzling bright colors. J. Ferrel Bonds II intricately lays waste to his drumkit like a maddog demolitions expert exuberantly relishing the precisely paced explosion to come. River City Tanlines obviously love their calling the proof is in the music. (CD)
VICTIM OF TIME
A dangerous romp of pool-hall jukebox metal that rivaled the Runaways straight out the gate with addictive hooks, spine-breaking basslines and brilliant songs that seemed to hit the mullet on the business end without a breather.