Very
excited to announce our new album from Canada's premier rock-n-roll spectacle Darlene Shrugg. Check out
'Strawberry Milk', the first track from their incredible self-titled
upcoming album, kindly premiered by Tiny Mix Tapes!
"It starts off with effervescently ambient
synths swirling around the listeners ear until a heartbeat bass begins
to chug, at which point the synths suddenly coalesce around an angelic
voice, rising with baroque-pop strings and a Laurie Anderson-esque
choir, ultimately launching the rock rocket to psychedelic heaven in its
final minute."
Darlene Shrugg's self-titled debut album will come out through Upset The Rhythm on October 27th!
Available to pre-order now: http://upsettherhythm.bigcartel.com/
Darlene Shrugg is unabashedly a rock ’n roll band. Formed in Toronto in
2013, it’s something of a local enigma; Darlene more or less abstains from an
internet presence, and its public performances are sporadic at best. Now, over
two, reticent years, Darlene has completed an LP, coaxing out an imaginatively
produced debut album of brash theatricality and uninhibited Rock and Roll.
Darlene represents collaborative convergence. The band was conceived
initially by Maximilian Turnbull (formerly Slim Twig) and Simone TB, who played
together for ten years as art-punk duo, Tropics. Seemingly having exhausted the
limits of their angular, hermetic approach, they felt it time to broaden
horizons. They invited Meg Remy, creative force behind the critically lauded
U.S. Girls project, to compose lyrics and vocal melodies for a new band’s
repertoire. It was quickly apparent that Remy should also perform in the band,
at which point both Carlyn Bezic and Amanda Crist, known for their electro-pop
duo, Ice Cream, also joined. An interesting dynamic developed. Turnbull &
TB generated instrumentals for Remy to write to. Furnished with lyrics and
melodies, the songs were then arranged by the entire group. This work and a
schedule of infrequent live shows continued for a couple of years until Young
Guv, of Fucked Up fame, cajoled the band into a studio with engineer-producer
Steve Chahley to finally record some of the exciting new tunes.
A certain alchemy has helped to establish the unique force found on the
debut album: four women, one man; four Canadians and an American; musical
collaborations stretching back to nascent high school years; punk exuberance
meeting studio finesse. Darlene exudes an easy confidence in combining the raw,
blunt power of the band’s writing and arrangements with Turnbull &
Chahley’s layered and, at times, elaborate production. The concise blast of
their self-titled debut seeks to compress, absorb and invert the energy of
classic rock. They profane, as much as pay tribute to a lineage of foundational
bands, arguably stemming from Black Sabbath and Alice Cooper through Thin
Lizzy, and on through the boy’s club fantasy of early 2000’s, ‘raw’ rock
revival bands, like The Strokes or The Hives. Gauche rock moves are ransacked
and transformed with the glee of an amateur cast production of the Rocky Horror
Picture Show. All of this unfolds in less than half an hour, leaving time for a
detour into the sublime with album centrepiece, Strawberry Milk, an
interstellar power ballad turned meditation on Eve, and the confrontation
between sex and eternity.
With their glammed-up, high intensity live show featuring all members
contributing vocals (save drummer TB), Darlene Shrugg seems not to rebut so
much as disregard the notion of Rock’s diminished cultural capital. Their
diverse brand of hard rock resists genre pigeon-holing. They fan out an array
of stylistic threads, which they might later choose to follow up, or perhaps
just as likely, skip past. They’ve laid waste to the Toronto underground. Now,
they’re hungry for more.
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