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crankees

  • punch the bossPunch The Boss b/w Down The Coast – The Crankees (Evil Tone)

    There’s no prospect of a new dawn in Australian industrial relations with sentiment like this going around. Sydney’s Crankeesexpress something we’ve all felt on the A side, a furious little garage punk tune that’s fuelled in equal parts by Jimmy Meek’ssnakey guitar line, Rodney Todd’ssnarkey vocal and guest Hammond organ from producer Jay Whalley.What do we want? Puglism. When do we want it? Now.

    The B side is almost as good, a wry ode to tree changing that keeps it simple and manages to namecheck Mollymook. There’s not a hint of garage slop; the band is tighter than the bends in the Princes Highway at Foxground with Meek’s guitar again to the fore. The production sounds great. Hopefully, they have an album in them. 

    Buy a copy here. It's a limited edition. While you're at it, look around and listen to Evil Tone's other stuff. They're putting out some great stuff.

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  • settle downSettle Down – Crankees (Evil Tone)

    The album does not fuck around so the review shall not: Sydney’s Crankeesencapsulate kicking against suburban ennui like Eddy Current Supression Ringdid 20 years ago, but won’t attract the same adoration because they don’t come from Melbourne.

    Where ECSR complained about boredom and negative ATM balances with what, at times, seemed like resigned ambivalence, Crankees sound, well, cranky. It’s punk rock that never tries too hard. The other truth is that “Settle Down” deserves to be heard further afield.