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Black Record

Original price was: £17.00.Current price is: £5.09.

SKU: 745680462 Category:

Description

No one else in American rock, underground or over, in 1974 and 75, was writing and playing songs this hard and graphic about being f**ked over and fighting mad. No one else is doing it now. David Fricke, editor of Rolling Stone. And, again, the bad penny shows up. Rocket From The Tombs is back. Black Record delivers eight new tracks, as well as definitive recordings of Rocket classics Sonic Reducer and Read It And Weep and a cover of The Sonics Strychnine. Still fighting mad. Fronted by founding members Crocus Behemoth and Craig Bell, Black Record delivers anthems borne of decades of raw energy coupled with decades of experienced musicianship, firmly assuring its place in the extraordinary history of the band. Loud, hard and fast, Welcome to the New Dark Ages, Coopy (Schrödingers Refrigerator) and I Keep A File On You are not breaking rules the rules broke forty years ago. Waiting For The Snow and Spooky are not band-aids to malaise theyre slap-in-the-face wake up calls. Every track is an assault. The band debuted June 16 1974. Between then and August 1975, when it finally crashed and burned, Rocket played a handful of shows, went through four drummers and wrote a set of songs that are now classics: 30 Seconds Over Tokyo, Final Solution, Aint It Fun, Amphetamine, Sonic Reducer, So Cold, and What Love Is. Pere Ubu, Saucers and The Dead Boys formed from the debris field. Over three decades, the bands reputation spread through underground bootlegs, the cream of which were eventually officially released as The Day The Earth Met The Rocket From The Tombs (2002). Thirteen years earlier, a San Diego band, Rocket From The Crypt, inspired by those bootlegs, co-opted the name and went on to forge a notable career. Pearl Jam and Guns N Roses recorded covers of Rocket songs. RFTT invited fellow Clevelanders This Moment In Black History to contribute to Black Record. Weve had a mutual admiration society going for years. I wanted them involved, singer Crocus Behemoth said. I wanted to feel a rival groups eyes on us as we worked.

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