Description
One of the most energetic bands in the business, The Fleshtones will celebrate their 40th anniversary with the release of their 21st album, The Band Drinks For Free. Featuring 12 songs about love, deceit, and death in classic Fleshtones style, the album carelessly (to the purists) tosses together the fuzz-guitar and Farfisa organ riffs of so-called garage rock with rockabilly, soul, and surf. And, yes, the band still drinks for free.
Dubbed Americas Garage Rock Band and The Kings Of Garage Rock, The Fleshtones have been the subject of books (Sweat by Joe Bonomo, Continuum Press 2007) and movies (Pardon Us For Living But The Graveyards Full, 2009) as well as amazement from fans and detractors alike. The Fleshtones are well into their fifth decade of making believers out of the most jaded naysayers with their mongrel stew known as Super Rock.
Tried and true American Living Legends, the Fleshtones return with their new album, The Band Drinks For Free. Hell, theyve earned it! To celebrate their fortieth anniversary, the gravity-defying Fleshtones take stock of their remarkable career, singing about the past and the future, knocked-out at how far the decades have receded yet excited for tomorrow nights show. Recorded at Florent Barbiers CCP Sound Studio in Brooklyn, New York, The Band Drinks For Free is a testament to surviving with a great attitude at great odds. If theres a theme that runs through the album its the bittersweet surprise of Time itself, how days and decades slip into oblivion, Kinks-ian church bells tolling away all of those hard-won hours.
The opener sets the tone, a groovy update of Ten Years Afters Love Like A Man, confident and swingin, riff-driven and churning with eighth-note organ blasts and gang vocals, featuring the Bellrays remarkable singer Lisa Kekaula in an epic fadeout. Like that stupid ol sun, the Fleshtones are burning bright, shining down on everyone, and are planning to last for a long, long time.






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