I had forgotten about the regular cleaning, preventing the cassette player "eating" the tape, until I thought of the comparison just now. Feral Coast brought it all back. No, I'm not nostalgic for winding the tape back in with pencil or Bic pen. I am enthusiastic about Scrunchies' album. Having written on two singles already this year, this may not come as a surprise.
With Feral Coast Scrunchies have released their inner beasts alright. This is punk music as punk comes. No back in the head thoughts about scoring a major hit. Let alone minding the recording quality. What you hear is what you get. Studio meters flying into the red or deep red, while the musicians give it their all, demanding the best and better performance of the loudness on their amps.
Scrunchies is a trio from Minneapolis, Minnesota. Laura Larson, sings and plays guitar, Danielle Cusack drums and does background vocals and newest member Matt Castore plays bass. Together they cook up a storm, where enthusiasm trumps playing to a 100% perfection. At the same time Scrunchies shows that it can play. From super punk anthems to letting a song totally fall apart in a sea of noise. It all comes by.
Promo photo: Nanne Sonvold |
The two best selling punkrock bands of the past nearly 30 years now, Green Day and The Offspring, have set a sort of standard. You can find traces of their music on Feral Coast. Scrunchies decided to put more emphasis on the first word of the title and that comes across. Listen to the song 'Absolute Maximum' and you not only know what I mean, it all falls together here. The huge riff, the noise in general, the wildness and a little anger and excitement. This song deserves a huge crowd at a huge festival wanting to totally party.
I can imagine that Feral Coast is too much noise for most people. It's their loss, as this is the real thing alright. Let's party like it's 1977, folks.
Wout de Natris
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