Saturday 26 September 2015

PRONG

















"ruining lives"
Year:  2014
Country:  US
City:  New York
Label:  SPV GmbH
Format:  CD, LP
Tracks:  12
Time:  40 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:    Industrial Metal












Despite I have no doubt the goal of PRONG is to make a kind of totally commercial music and to sign with major labels like "SPV" or similars, I have to admit their are exceptional musicians and know how and when to make a good album. Being one of the pioners into the industrial metal genre and to make albums like "Cleansing" or "Rude awakening", more industrial and electronic oriented, PRONG took hardcore / punk influences from its far begining as a band and recorded this album here entitled "Ruining lives". In this album we can to appreciate good heavy metal riffs on the guitars but also industrial rhythms and fast hardcore punk songs. Three elements which become "Ruining lives" in one of my favourites PRONG albums. Clear and a little bit melodic voices, high technical level, good studio production and brief great songs which are welcome just at the first time you listen to them. Formed in New York in 1986, the band confirmed its talent more than thirty years after with this ninth studio album.
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Tuesday 22 September 2015

THE PRISONERS
















"The best of"
Year:  2004
Country:  UK
City:  Chatham
Label:  Big Beat
Format:  CD
Tracks:  21
Time:  60 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:       Mod        Garage Rock

















MOD band formed in 1982 in Chatham, England. They were a regular live fixture on the London "garage revival" mini-scene of the early 80´s and often toured with sparring partners THE MILKSHAKES who included Billy Childish on guitar. The Prisoners sound combined catchy, retro flavoured melodies, punk guitar riffs, a Steve Marriott-esque vocal style and a lead instrument of the then-unfashionable Hammond organ. The Prisoners never met with much commercial success during their original lifespan but have latterly been likened to Paul Weller and The Charlatans. Indeed Tim Burgess of the Charlatans has cited the Prisoners as a major influence. After releasing several self-financed records and spending a year with "Big Beat Records", in 1985 The Prisoners signed a new management deal with "Acid Jazz" that saw them move away from the London garageband tag and instead directly into the MOD revival mainstream. They also made a patchy final album, "In From The Cold", for the ailing "Stiff Records" label. These deal were unsuccessful and the band split up acrimoniously in 1986. They have however reformed for live shows several times since then and managed to release a final one-off single in 1997. Since splitting up the members of The Prisoners have featured in a wide range of bands. James Taylor and Allan Crockford formed mainstream jazz funk band The James Taylor Quartet in 1986, although Allan Crockford is no longer part of their line-up. The Solarflares, who released four albums before splitting up in 2004, were Graham Day and Allan Crockford basically reprising The Prisoners sound along with drummer Simon "Wolf" Howard and Mr Parsley on organ. Other bands who have featured former members of The Prisoners are Planet, The Buff Medways, The Prime Movers, The Mighty Caesars and The Stabilisers … among many others.
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