Shouts
Want to share your thoughts about this artist? Join Last.fm or log in to leave a shout.
-
-
Replies
-
jsaunders25
Same, main reason I came to this page that day was to check what kind of spike there was. Glad to see that song got a good spike, but unfortunately not translating to many more total scrobbles for the band.
Actions
-
Replies
-
Replies
-
-
-
-
-
Replies
-
Replies
-
-
-
-
MasReficul
Awful band. Fully representative of and definitely largely responsible for the absolute fucking state of especially Australian music but also rock in general. Image comes before actual musical content for these flops, contrived larrikin image + music that suggests rawness but is actually incredibly polished. Pop-slop LARPing as real rocking rock and roll... pure and simple. Maybe you have to be Australian to actually grasp how poo these guys actually are and how detrimental to rock music they/their movement has been, though in fairness they and their movement is certainly a symptom rather than a cause. Bad regardless.
Actions
Replies
-
-
-
-
Replies
-
-
-
-
-
Replies
-
helikopteri13
i feel like the new album is way more personal, intimate and covers more hard to process feelings than its predecessors. i like it. like a lot. the full blast balls to the wall approach front to back is the usual pov people see them from and im glad they made something that breaks that mould. feels more like a product of its time.
Actions
Replies
-
Replies
-
BAG_OF_SHIT
i just heard 'tiny bikini' utter dogshit. im convinced this is an astroturfed industry band
Actions
-
OrionTheGamer
This album is self-released. Virgin Music involved only in producing and distribution of american vynil release. B2B and Rough Trade for vynil (for Europe and Australia), and for CD and cassete releases.
Actions
-
-
Replies
-
-
Replies
-
Replies
-
-
-
Replies
-
Replies
-
-
-
Replies
-
-
Replies
-
-
-
-
Replies
-
-
Replies
-
-
-
Replies
-
-
-
-
blazerparrish
Idk anything about these guys but their name makes me want to sniff some pig sweat brand poppers
Actions
-
Replies
-
-
-
-
-
-
Replies
-
omg_a_lcnife111
The normalisation of the bogan lifestyle follows the template laid out during the gangsta rap period of the early 90s. Social engineering is most effective when the message is clear, simple and unspoken. Remember those supermodels that promoted heroin chic and a starvation philosophy? The one good thing to be said about living in the gutter is the view you get of the stars. That and access to cheap meds.
Actions
-
-
-