![]() New Multi-Arts Venue The Shed Opening on The Highl.Dylan Cover #314 Joan Osborne "All Along The Watch.Phish Announce Summer Festival: Curveball Watkins.Album Review: The Dwarves - Take Back The Night.Album Review: Legend of the Seagullmen - Legend of.Support the band, buy the album and peep some video below: The group has always been shock based and longtime fans will be satisfied with those surprises on Take Back The Night. Perhaps the most shocking aspect of this release is four *GASP* clean versions of songs presented here. While not as instantly enjoyable as the bands last release, 2014's The Dwarves Invented Rock and Roll, the group still manages to deliver what they have become known for. "Trace Amounts" also goes more of a pop rock route with a tune about a women who OD's and takes a sad yet not celebratory or judgmental approach a sobering stance from this group of partying jokers One of the best tracks from the band is "Julio" which manages to channel Lou Reed, name check Frank Zappa's album and wrap it all up with surf rock style and Mexican flair. Don't fear, tracks like "Down and Dirty" and "Nowhere Fast" find the band back in the bands glam punk sound while the closing duet "The Giver" is a rollicking battle of the sexes. The group broadens its sounds and style a bit with the dance ready "You Turn Me On" but finding a dance club to dance to it in would be trip while "Safe Space" mixes noise rock with samples and off beat screeches to mix things up. The ripping "Devil's Level" and "Everything and Moore" are brief blasts of demonic slamming covered in "blood and cum". If you aren't laughing at that one, then don't even give The Dwarves a second look, you won't be able to stand the shit they toss at their neighbors in San Francisco during "City By The Bay" and the sexual standards discussed in "Anything That Moves". The title track is a sing along rage, while the drums bang in hardcore fashion with "It's You I Don't Believe" which is directed towards politicians while "Here's Looking At You Kid" takes the role of peeping pedophilia just par for the course from this group. Seventeen songs of spitfire pop punk that rarely lasts longer than a minute or two, the players slam ahead with a full head of steam. The irreverent group has been doing this so long they can bang these tracks out in their sleep but with the current state of affairs in this country the group has some juicy targets to attack this go around. For their lucky thirteenth studio album the self proclaimed "best band ever" The Dwarves try to Take Back The Night with their speedy brand of rockin' roll. ![]()
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