
In The Red
Thee Oh Sees - Help (Purple Vinyl)
Regular price £25.00 Save £-25.00Product Description
-
In
The
Red
is
having
the
finest
form
of
any
record
label
in
many
many
years...and
at
the
end
of
april
will
be
releasing
the
new
recordings
from
John
Dwyer's
combo...If
you've
followed
the
San
Francisco
underground
for
the
past
ten
years,
you
might
already
be
familiar
with
John
Dwyer.
Or-tastes
depending-you
might
not
know
him
at
all.
A
friend
and
devotee
of
preeminent
Providence
noise
rock
act
Lightning
Bolt,
the
majority
of
Dwyer's
repertoire
falls
on
the
indie
spectrum's
more
visceral
wavelengths.
He
was
Pink
in
Pink
and
Brown,
fronted
Coachwhips,
and
played
guitar
in
the
dysfunctional
Hospitals.
If
you're
unfamiliar
with
or
in
search
of
a
refresher,
you
can
search
YouTube
for
a
crash
course
on
any
of
these
bands.
Some
popular
tags
are:
"garage,"
"punk,"
and
"sweat."
If
you
like
what
you
see,
do
yourself
a
favor
and
check
out
Dwyer's
newest
band,
Thee
Oh
Sees.
"Newest"
because
they've
only
been
around
for
six
albums-albeit
in
different
incarnations,
under
several
different
names
(OCS,
the
Oh
Sees,
et
al.)
with
several
different
sounds.
Formed
in
the
wake
of
his
more
volatile
commitments,
Thee
Oh
Sees
started
as
an
extension
of
Dwyer's
softer
side.
Their
early
recordings
were
somber
and
beautiful.
Last
year,
Thee
Oh
Sees
made
an
unexpected
turn,
delivering
their
wildest,
weirdest,
hardestrocking
record
yet
with
The
Master's
Bedroom
Is
Worth
Spending
A
Night
In.
Now
Thee
Oh
Sees
have
followed
it
with
an
even
wilder,
more
hard-rocking
record,
Help.
Recorded
by
Chris
Woodhouse
(the
A-Frames,
Mayyors),
Help
draws
straight,
dark
lines
to
both
the
British
psychedelic
rock
of
bands
like
The
Creation
and
the
caveman
thud
of
The
Troggs
while
a
Cramps-like
appreciation
for
rockabilly
lies
not
far
below.
The
album
weaves
Dwyer's
signature
AM
radio
howl
with
the
catchiest
of
driving
tunes,
Brigid
Dawson's
gorgeous
harmonies,
heightened
fidelity,
thick
spring-reverbed
bombast,
mighty
drums,
and
an
undeniable
pull.
The
result
is
a
sound
somewhere
beyond
nostalgia,
beyond
the
garage,
beyond
the
fireside
song
and
supposed
goo-rock.
Modern
rock
'n'
roll
records
don't
come
much
better
than
this
and
Thee
Oh
Sees
are
one
of
the
best
bands
going.
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