Sloppy Seconds are back with their classic style of punk rock attack. 'More Trouble' is their first new album since 1996 & is chalk full of new gems as well as a cover of a Connie Francis classic. With themes close to their hearts like, porn stars, junk food, parties, beer blasts, comic books, they have carved their niche in the punk underworld. Produced by Paul Mahern of the Zero Boys. [Amazon]***
What a KILLER comeback for the kings of "Junk-Rock"!!! Your brian will hardly be able to contain all the instant "junk-hits" there are on this CD!!! How good can a record be? This good!!! [Toxxy]
After witnessing the Birmingham leg of The Clash’s White Riot tour in the spring of 1977, Coventry rock band Midnight Circus adopted a more streamlined, urgent sound and a more punk-friendly name. As The Flys, they issued a self-financed five-track EP at the end of the year before signing with EMI on the back of a tour with Buzzcocks.
Erotic Lounge - there is no better music to sex! A good collection of music - like a carefully cut diamond, find it among the slag heaps at times as difficult as to give the latter form. If we continue the analogy, the Sony BMG music produces such "diamonds" is not worse than the precious masterpieces by Cartier or Tiffany & Co. Therefore, past collections Erotic Lounge series to go hard, they cover charmingly attractive and content even more striking. The first collection was released in 2003, and each subsequent out once per year, revealing new facets as erotic titles.
Although Germany had its place in rock & roll's evolution in the 1960s, it was primarily as an incubator for British bands playing grueling stints in Hamburg, not for homegrown talent. The Lords were about the best of a weak scene, populated by bands that could never seem to shake themselves free of stodgy Central European oom-pah folk traditions. Quite popular in their own country, the Lords made no impression in the English-speaking world until a couple of decades later, when reappreciation of '60s beat and garage music became so intense that collectors began to investigate the strange and wonderful world of Continental '60s rock.