Posts Tagged ‘Batter Blaster’

**BLAST Campaign: The Black Angels (Band #19)

Saturday, April 2nd, 2011

Get a free download of the first single “Telephone” from The Black Angel’s newest album Phosphene Dream, which debuted at #50 on Billboard’s Top 200 Charts, when you call **BLAST (**25278) today. Straight out of Austin, this band makes great music that you shouldn’t pass up!

About The Black Angels

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The Black Angels’ music alone is enough to invoke spirits. It’s the sound of long nights on peyote, dreams of a new world order, and half-invented memories of the seamy side of ‘60s psychedelia.

While the Iraq war is still a major influence on the band and their creative decisions, there are new forces at work behind Directions, such as Eugene Zamyatin’s dystopian novel We and, says Christian Bland, “psychic information from the past and future.”

The band formed in 2004 and released Passover two years later to critical acclaim. Most of all, Passover established The Black Angels as a band with brains, balls and a strong message. Directions continues this tradition of being honest and unapologetic “Our central theme is that people need to open up their minds and let everything come through… to learn from past mistakes,” says Christian. “Only then will we understand the reality of this world and progress beyond where we are now as humans…“War is Peace.Freedom is Slavery.Ignorance is Strength.
Keep Music Evil.”

**BLAST Campaign: BNLX (Band #18)

Friday, April 1st, 2011

Call **BLAST (**25278) today to get a free song download from BNLX’s EP #3! We hope you’re enjoying the songs so far on **BLAST! We handpick every song that we make available, and we want to give you a diverse collection of music. We cannot wait to give you many more great songs and bands throughout the campaign!

About BNLX:

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BNLX has been meeting and/or exceeding expectations whilst providing mission critical noise solutions to the entertainment sector since Q1 | 2010. The band is a two-piece noise/electronic ensemble featuring musicians; it also incorporates visual and narrative elements.

BNLX “music” releases EP 1, EP 2, EP 3, EP 4, and EP 5 are now for sale at Susstones.com. All BNLX physical products are handcrafted by organic and electronic elves, individually numbered and limited in edition.

For more info on BNLX visit their website or Facebook page!

**BLAST Campaign EXCLUSIVE: Jesse Dayton (Band #17)

Thursday, March 31st, 2011

Another **BLAST EXCLUSIVE is here! Alternative Country singer Jesse Dayton is letting us use one of his unreleased songs for our **BLAST campaign. Call **BLAST (**25278) on your mobile phone today to get a free download of his song “Take out the Trash!” You won’t find it anywhere else.

About Jesse Dayton:

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Jesse Dayton just doesn’t do it like everyone else. Raised on the Gulf Coast musical gumbo that accepts everything from the classic heartbreak honky tonk of George Jones to the honking classic rock of the Big Bopper to the blue-eyed soul of RnB outfits like Cookie and the Cupcakes, Dayton’s musical vision goes far beyond the boundaries of what we usually consider “country music.” In fact, his vision is so big and so different from the restrictive notions of industry bigwigs and record companies that after years of working within the system, Dayton has chucked the whole chase, starting his own Stag Records label, producing his own records, going his own way. His latest Stag recording is a great example of what freedom and independence have done for Dayton the artist. Heavily influenced by ’60s soul artists and soulful country artists like George Jones, Conway Twitty, Charlie Rich, and Jerry Lee Lewis, Country Soul Brother mines Dayton’s blue-eyed soul side, yet everything is done within Dayton’s exciting and highly volatile turbo-country template, making for an entirely unique album that stands out from the lumpy mass of albums known collectively today as alternative country.

George Jones to the honking classic rock of the Big Bopper to the blue-eyed soul of RnB outfits like Cookie and the Cupcakes, Dayton’s musical vision goes far beyond the boundaries of what we usually consider “country music.” In fact, his vision is so big and so different from the restrictive notions of industry bigwigs and record companies that after years of working within the system, Dayton has chucked the whole chase, starting his own Stag Records label, producing his own records, going his own way. His latest Stag recording is a great example of what freedom and independence have done for Dayton the artist. Heavily influenced by ’60s soul artists and soulful country artists like George Jones, Conway Twitty, Charlie Rich, and Jerry Lee Lewis, Country Soul Brother mines Dayton’s blue-eyed soul side, yet everything is done within Dayton’s exciting and highly volatile turbo-country template, making for an entirely unique album that stands out from the lumpy mass of albums known collectively today as alternative country.

So how did a Gulf Coast kid from a blue-collar industrial town arrive at this particular musical place? Given his independent maverick streak, it’s not all that surprising that Dayton began his music career as a self-starter playing house parties that he and his drummer Eric Tucker (“my best friend since sixth grade”) organized. The young musical entrepreneurs would work the door to cover expenses — like the keg, — then move to the stage where they’d play anything from George Jones to the Clash. Jason Burns joined the band on bass, and they began their long stint as the energetic party rockabilly outfit, The Road Kings.

By the time The Road Kings were tearing up stages all over the U.S. and Europe, Dayton was coming to the realization that he had more music in him than rockabilly would allow. Dayton segued from The Road Kings into alt-country outfit Alamo Jets, which became local favs in Houston and Austin and brought Dayton to the attention of Texas-based independent label Justice Records.

He did two records for Justice, only one of which saw the light of day. His debut solo recording, Raisin’ Cain, reached #1 on the Americana Music radio chart and introduced the world to Dayton’s unique brand of country music, labeled “turbo country” by the Austin American Statesman. New Country Magazine called Dayton “the most promising country debut since the Mavericks’ From Hell To Paradise.” Raisin’ Cain raised eyebrows all over the country music industry and identified Dayton as a truly gifted guitarist. Legendary artists like Kris Kristofferson, Johnny Cash, Ray Price, and Waylon Jennings took notice. Waylon hired Dayton to play on his Right For The Time recording. Dayton simply says “spending that time with Waylon changed me forever.”

A difference of opinion ensued at Justice, so the follow up to Raisin’ Cain was shelved. Dayton then moved to Los Angeles where he reformed The Road Kings and recorded an album for Surfdog/Hollywood Records. The Kings toured both nationally and internationally with several acts, including Chris Isaak.

While in L.A., Dayton began work on a collection of songs he felt highlighted his “writers voice.” Deeply influenced by Justice Record labelmates Willie Nelson and Billy Joe Shaver and by Townes Van Zandt, L.A. seemed to be at odds with the musical direction Dayton felt pulled in. He felt Austin calling. He settled into the South Austin music and art community just a stone’s throw from the legendary Continental Club. Hanging out with Austin’s elite musicians enlightened Dayton to the D.I.Y. way of releasing music, leading him to record and release Tall Texas Tales himself. But due to limited reach and resources, the album found few listeners (or buyers, if you will) but had a hugely successful run with the pioneering Internet music website Mp3.com, where Dayton’s “Jumped Head First” hit #1 on both its Pop and Country charts.

Realizing his quest for larger audiences could not be accomplished without help, Dayton enlisted two partners and formed roots-oriented Stag Records. The first item of business at Stag was to pull the follow up to Raisin’ Cain off the shelf and finally release it. There had been rumors for years that Dayton had a “Nashville record” that had never seen the light of day. Hey Nashvegas (STAG-003; September 25, 2001) was recorded primarily in Nashville, but featured a checklist of Texas stellar musicians, including the as yet unknown Dixie Chicks, Jim Lauderdale, piano legend Floyd Domino, fiddle giant Johnny Gimble. A tour de force of classic country styles without the saccharin and sterility that have become the staples of the genre, the album quickly entered the Top 5 on the Americana chart. Dayton took the title from some graffiti in a Nashville coffeehouse, and the album is a plea for Nashville to remember what made it great. The album also illustrated a valuable lesson Dayton has learned from his musical survivor mentors like Waylon Jennings and Jim Lauderdale: Borrow without stealing and return the goods in fine or better shape. Writing about the album, the Austin American-Statesman said, “Like the Possum (George Jones), Dayton is the possessor of a tear-stained voice, a lost soul sensibility and probably a high degree of familiarity with the kinds of places mama warned you about.” Even the European press joined the party. Mojo Magazine wrote, “It’s been ten years, when Steve Earle and Dwight Yoakam emerged, since country music launched a new artist this powerful.”

With all the Justice material released, Dayton decided to put a fresh coat of paint (new, original artwork and three bonus tracks) on his “writers record,” and Tall Texas Tales (STAG-002) was officially released July 1, 2003. Dayton has made a record that self-consciously denies all the labels and subsumes them under the banner of songwriting. “It sounds like Austin in the ’70s, stripped down singer-songwriter country,” he suggests. “My voice on this record is about an inch from your nose.”

The time since Tall Texas Tales has been spent touring the U.S. and Europe, including prestigious festivals such as the Blue Highway Festival (Netherlands), Country Rendevous Festival (France), Jazz and Blues Festival (Belgium) and countless domestic events. His tight touring band of Brian Thomas (steel, banjo, dobro), Eric Tucker (drums) and Elmo Sproat (bass) was captured on the bootleg EP, Live In Las Vegas, available only at shows and at jessedayton.com.

After getting his new business up and running and with all his recordings released, Dayton felt a need to change it up once again. Ever the fan of soulful country crooners like Conway Twitty and George Jones, Dayton set out to recharge his musical batteries with a heavy dose of soul. Country Soul Brother (STAG-006, Oct. 19, 2004) features 12 songs, most of which are in the power-packed honky tonk style that has kept Dayton in the roadhouses and rock clubs instead of the slick line dancing venues. There’s a lot about the album that should remind people of Texas music pioneer Doug Sahm, who coined the apropos phrase, “You just can’t live in Texas if you don’t have a lot of soul.”

With his Telecaster thrust up front in the mix and a voice seasoned by the nightly Jim Beam marinade, Dayton is in fine form on the album. Throw in some funky blasts from Antone’s Horns, tasty fills by keyboard legend Riley Osbourn, and the blues-soaked backing vocals of Carolyn Wonderland and you’ve got country music that harkens back a few decades. Many classic country acts perform loving tributes, but the real trick is adding a personal stamp. When Dayton belts out something like George Jones’s “The Grand Tour” or Jim Lauderdale’s “King of Fools”, he always likes to tell his audiences that “these aren’t covers, these are classics.” And when Dayton pulls a trick out his musical bag like his innovative cover of The Cars monster hit “You Were Just What I Needed” or sings his guts out on the Gulf Coast RnB classic “I’ve Got A Right To Cry,” audiences tend to howl in appreciation. Whether he’s covering a classic or singing one of his fine originals like “Jesus Pick Me Up,” Dayton’s original delivery proves he’s doing more than emulating artists who’ve gone before him. In everything he does these days, Dayton pays respect to the country tradition while forging ahead.

Jesse Dayton is often referred to as “the best kept secret in modern country music.” If you ever get down to Houston, come by the Continental Club some steaming Saturday night and let yourself in on the secret. I guarantee there’ll be a party goin’ on. And Jesse Dayton will be right in the middle of it.

**BLAST Campaign: Pancho-san (Band #16)

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

Enjoy a free song download of “There Were Trumpets Blaring” by San Francisco band Pancho-san when you call **BLAST (**25278) today on your mobile phone!

About Pancho-san:

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Pancho-san is a San Francisco band that began as the home-recording project of Patrick Abernethy (formerly of the bands Beulah, and Rogue Wave). He drafted former bandmates Eli Crews (Beulah) and Pat Spurgeon (Rogue Wave) to help finish the record and complete the band line-up. In 2010 they released their first album, “Oh, Mellow Melody”, and took the songs out on a U.S. tour. Their sound could be described as “indie/folk/50′s/rock/americana/bossa nova/blues”. A lot of different influences, put together in their own, unique way.

**BLAST Campaign: Ian Moore (Band #15)

Tuesday, March 29th, 2011

Don’t miss out on the exclusive, free download today of Ian Moore’s unreleased song “Coraline” when you call **BLAST (**25278) from your mobile phone. You won’t find it anywhere else!

About Ian Moore:

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El Sonido Nuevo, the new studio record from Austin-raised, Seattle-based singer/songwriter Ian Moore, his seventh, bridges the gap between the stylistic offshoots of his past few records and the guitar-slinging bravado that characterized his earlier, often bluesier, output. “The album is a retrenching in the face of a diffuse pop culture landscape,” says Moore. “Every band has ten members, every movie is a sequel, there are 500 channels and nothing’s on.”

**BLAST Campaign: Butch Walker (Band #14)

Monday, March 28th, 2011

Enjoy a free song download of “She Likes Hair Bands” by music writer, producer and performer Butch Walker when you call **BLAST (**25278) today on your mobile phone!

About Butch Walker

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Butch Walker was hooked on hard rock ever since he was little. He loved heavy metal and new wave. He would play in clubs 6 nights a week in a metal cover band, and get up 2 hours later to go to high school, with eyeliner still running down his face.

While he was still a kid, he left Cartersville, Ga. with my clubbing cash, moved to LA and took his band with him. They were signed to a major label record deal 10 months later, making a record with a hot producer, and a video with the guy who did all those dumb Aerosmith videos. However, shortly after, they got the memo from the label that our style of music was being eaten by a guy named Eddie Vedder.

Butch ended up ditching the whole concept and decided to venture on his own. He was getting into a lot of indie records and hated what a lot of the rock “market” had become. He started hanging out at the local record store and arguing with the clerks about which Pavement or Pixies record was better. He started getting into stuff like Sloan, Weezer, Jellyfish, Beck and Radiohead and liked it all.

All through the 90′s, his new band played 250 shows a year all over the country, in countless vans, and KOA’s, and played wherever they could get a gig. They sold their own merch, records and tapes (!), and made enough money to come back to Atlanta every once in awhile to pay rent. They did very well, but the music was not quite there. Butch was still searching for his real identity, underneath his musically schizophrenic skin.

Well, just as we started to be inundated with one-syllable, one-word, misspelled (sp?) band names that took themselves way too seriously, I put THE MARVELOUS 3 (R.I.P.) together, and within a year of playing a few sold out shows around the southeast (and a lot of empty ones too), 99X, a big station in Atlanta started playing a song of ours (on our indie release) called “Freak of the Week” on their station. It blew up.

After producing an unsuccessful next album, the band broke up, and Butch went underground in 2009. He started getting asked to write and produce with other groups around the country. Some of these groups went on to have big hits and sales like Avirl Lavigne, Simple Plan, Midtown, Sevendust and American Hi-Fi.

Now he writes and produces his own music and albums as well as for others.

**BLAST Campaign: Four Year Strong (Band #13)

Sunday, March 27th, 2011

Punk band Four Year Strong offers their song “Heroes Get Remembered, Legends Never Die” to you today for free when you call **BLAST (**25278) from your mobile phone!

About Four Year Strong:

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A single word can hardly describe the kind of career Four Year Strong have experienced since the release of their 2007 debut album, but “epic” comes pretty close. Alan Day (Vocals/Guitar), Dan O’Conner (Vocals/Guitar), Joe Weiss (Bass), Josh Lyford (Synth), and Jake Massucco (Drums) are Four Year Strong. The band has long since graduated from their closet venue and community center background, selling out 2000-capacity headlining shows with their perfected formula of unrelenting spirit, gut-wrenchingly good music, and no flashy gimmicks. Their unique blend of brutal breakdowns and soaring choruses incites a riot like nothing seen before, leaving live crowds and CD listeners alike simultaneously blown away and fired up.

Rise or Die Trying premiered September 18th, 2007 on I Surrender Records. Over one year later, the album continues to generate an excited buzz across the web. It caught the ears of Fall Out Boy’s Pete Wentz and in February 2008, the band was proud to announce its partnership with Decaydance Records, joining the ranks of bands like Panic at the Disco, The Academy Is…, and Gym Class Heroes. With the support of both Decaydance and I Surrender Records, Four Year Strong are building themselves to the top with an indestructible foundation.

Their influences range from Lifetime to Saves the Day, Gorilla Biscuits to New Found Glory. “We just play exactly what we want to hear,” describes Dan, explaining their combination of hardcore and pop-punk. The five guys of Four Year Strong have already shared the stage with The Starting Line, Cobra Starship, and pop-punk legends New Found Glory, as well as touring across Japan, Australia, and the UK. After a stint on the 2008 Vans Warped Tour Smartpunk stage, the band is featured on Rockstar Taste of Chaos Tour, alongside Bring Me The Horizon, Thursday, and Cancer Bats.

Four Year Strong have made themselves known as one of Alternative Press’s “100 Bands You Need To Know in ‘08” and “Most Anticipated of ‘09”, not to mention Rolling Stone’s “40 Bands You Need To Know”. Frequenting the iTunes Top Alternative charts, Smartpunk Top 10 sales and Purevolume’s “most played” charts, the band has garnered 9 million plays on MySpace by simply making music the way they want it to be made.

Armed with do-it-yourself determination, Four Year Strong do not pretend to be anyone but themselves. The band does not sugarcoat their image, avoiding the pretty-boy front that smothers the scene. Behind the numerous tattoos and grizzly beards, Four Year Strong are the kind of guys you would want to bring home to Mom and Dad. The band does not bother with egos or attitude, determined to connect with every fan on a personal level.

Four Year Strong combine equal parts melody and mayhem; however, their true talent lies in the ability to use these parts to create one exciting, infectious whole. “We wanted to put out a great record and not just a bunch of great songs.” They fully embrace their album title, Rise or Die Trying, and Four Year Strong will continue to move up and up until they’ve taken the world by storm. With a new album on the horizon, things are only getting bigger for Four Year Strong.

Brace yourself, start the takeover.

**BLAST Campaign: Foxy Shazam (Band #12)

Saturday, March 26th, 2011

Don’t pass up the free download of the soul sounds of “Second Floor” by Foxy Shazam when you call **BLAST (**25278) today from your mobile phone!

About Foxy Shazam:

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Foxy Shazam is made up of Eric Nally (lead singer & founder), Daisy (bass) Aaron McVeigh (drums), Alex Nauth (horns) Loren Turner (guitar) and Sky White (piano). Eric Nally is twenty-four years old, the father of two boys, Julian Michael and Francis Jordan, as well as a loving husband to Karen Nally. This creates an interesting contrast to his career as a professional musician.

Eric grew up in Cincinnati, Ohio, and was one of two white boys in an all-black high school. The band name Foxy Shazam came from a saying in my school meaning, “cool shoes.” If you had cool shoes kids would say those are “foxy shazam.” Because of this Foxy Shazam has a lot of soul, and try to let it bleed through their music as much as possible. In the early years Eric’s mom and dad bought his band cheap guitars and amps and drove them to shows in the family Thunderbird.

Alex, the trumpet player of Foxy Shazam, is classically trained, has a likable personality and is easy to get along with. His horn playing has added to the uniqueness to their sound.

Loren, their guitar player is a weird guy to get the hang of and he’s very quiet. Everyone that meets him gets the impression that he’s mad at them but that’s not the case, it’s just the way his face looks. He loves Dimebag Darrell and that influences his guitar playing.

Daisy, the bass player of Foxy Shazam, has been in the band for about three years. His contribution to the band is enormous and without him they would not sound the way that they do.

Aaron, the drummer, is the newest member of the band. The position of Foxy’s drummer, until Aaron, has been one that is filled temporarily but never permanently. His drumming is not overly fancy and is extremely solid, which is exactly what they’ve been looking for all these years.

Last but not least is Sky White, the pianist who is trained in classical and jazz performance. Eric saw him stand on his keyboard with a piñata on his head at one of his shows and knew he had to get him in Foxy Shazam. It didn’t take too much convincing and a week later they were recording our first album Flamingo Trigger (which came out in 2005) and went on to do Introducing (2008).

Foxy Shazam is not concerned with what category it falls into. They want to stand for their generation.

“We want to be the biggest band in the world.
We are the Michael Jordan of Rock N’ Roll.”

**BLAST Campaign: Gold Panda (Band #11)

Friday, March 25th, 2011

Named one of SPIN Magazine’s 35 Must-Hear Acts at SXSW, London’s Gold Panda takes over **BLAST today. His song “You” is available for free download when you call **BLAST (**25278) from your mobile phone!

About Gold Panda:

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Hailing from Chelmsford, Essex, Gold Panda spent the early part of last year building a reputation as remixer du jour for the likes of Little Boots, Telepathe, Bloc Party, Simian Mobile Disco, Health and The Field, before releasing three EPs of his own material in the summer to huge critical acclaim from the likes of Pitchfork, Dazed and Confused, The Guardian, NME and beyond. Live performances soon followed and his invigorated head hunched style quickly won further fans as well as establishing him as an artist who could play live rather than just prod at an expensive laptop.

The journey to his current illuminated standings has been long and intermittently strange. Having spent downtime behind the counters of various establishments of ill repute – finding out that record stores and adult stores are no less seedier than each other. GP consolidated the rest of his hours creating archives of electronic music; each track different from the other, incorporating multitudes of styles and disparate influences and obscure samples and base material.

With his raved-about remixes that quickly found the interested of various labels, blogs and tastemakers interest in his own material was inevitable and Gold Panda began culling his back-archive of material for a series of low key releases. The first was ‘Miyamae’, a 12” on Various, followed by the ‘Quitters Raga’ 7” on Make Mine, and the third, ‘Before’ was released digitally and on 250 limited CDs via Puregroove. The releases were heavily influenced from a year spent living in Japan, as well as B movies on vhs video, minimal techno and hip hop. An avowed lover of Japanese culture and it’s lifestyle, Gold Panda spend two years at the renowned School of Oriental and Asian Studies (SOAS) learning to read and write Japanese.

Now having essentially cleared the decks (bar the 100+ tracks that may one day creep into the open as he sees fit), 2010 will see Gold Panda releasing his debut album and pushing on and consolidating his quickly burgeoning reputation as one of the brightest names in the electronic scene.

**BLAST Campaign: Buffalo Tom (Band #9)

Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011

The free download of the day when you call **BLAST (**25278) on your mobile phone is “Arise, Watch” by the alternative rock band Buffalo Tom. Remember: there’s a different song by a different band available every day for free when you call **BLAST.

About Buffalo Tom:

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Buffalo Tom released its eighth studio album, Skins, on February 15th, 2011. Produced by the band in their hometown of Boston, MA, and mixed by long-time friends Paul Q. Kolderie (who produced the band’s breakout third album, 1992’s Let Me Come Over) and Tom Polce, Skins is the follow up to 2007’s acclaimed Three Easy Pieces, which brought Buffalo Tom back into the spotlight after a nine-year hiatus. Skins is the first release on the band’s own Scrawny Records via a worldwide partnership with The Orchard, and features guest Tanya Donnelly of Belly, Breeders and Throwing Muses fame singing on the song “Don’t Forget Me.” Besides the standard CD, a deluxe edition will be available with demos and b-sides, as well as a vinyl version with a download card featuring the additional songs. The first song from the album, “Arise, Watch,” debuted this week on Stereogum.

Skins is everything you want from a Buffalo Tom album – its rock pummels and its ballads ache – and it reminds you why they hold such a strong place in so many people’s hearts, including Jon Stewart, who had the band play on the final airing of his late-night syndicated talk show in the late 90s. Still comprised of the original trio of Bill Janovitz (guitars and vocals), Chris Colbourn (bass and vocals) and Tom Maginnis (drums), the songwriting is as sharp and poignant today as it ever was. From the signature interplay of Janovitz and Colbourn’s vocals to the scorching guitars and rolling thunderous drum arrangements, few other bands have been able to master depth and sensitivity at such volumes.

Writer/actor Mike O’Malley, whose star has recently risen higher as a result of his work on Glee, loves the band so much that he asked to write the bio for Skins. In it, he writes of the moment he discovered the band when they released 1994’s Big Red Letter Day:

“Here were men my age making music about things that mattered — how we navigate our lives amidst the messes we get handed and the messes we’ve made – and they were doing it with an authentic sound that had heft, texture and drive. They did what we want our rock and roll to do – distill potent observations about life and disguise any sentimentality — eliminate it – by backing up the observations with guitars and drums.”

He continues:

“And for those who fell for the Buffalo Tom of “Taillights Fade,” “Soda Jerk,” “Tree House” and “Summer,” this document exists, in part to proclaim that Buffalo Tom’s new album Skins is worthy of your attention. It has all the things that Buffalo Tom does well. Songs about situations and subjects that the average human can relate to — with all the gravity you’d expect from a band that still has something to say. Throughout Skins, Buffalo Tom is unafraid to go deeper than the surface layer, and they spend much of this record bringing forth warnings, laments and admonishments.”

The tracklist for Skins is below:

01 Arise, Watch
02 She’s Not Your Thing
03 Down
04 Don’t Forget Me
05 Guilty Girls
06 Miss Barren Brooks
07 Paper Knife
08 Here I Come
09 Lost Weekend
10 The Hawks & The Sparrows
11 The Big Light
12 The Kids Just Sleep
13 Out of The Dark