Hair, Nails and Beauty, Shabby Rogue's first album, is available on CD BABY
. The new album is available from the 31st July 2009
Sounds Like
'The Rogue recall a galliant wardrobe of 1960s heroes from Arthur Lee to Bob Dylan, while imprinting their influences with fresh emotions and ideas. As an introduction to an outrageously good live band you could do far worse than investigate this beautiful and troubled album...' Artrocker Magazine
Shabby Rogue have spent the last two years immersed in their own vortex of musical fury. They have emerged, stronger, faster, both more brutal and more prepared to understand other people's emotional problems. Despite this constitutional change, which has transformed them from the band that they once were into the band that holds the future of music within their grasp they remain ultimately the same, by which we mean: sort of untogether. Their new album is scored by these same characteristics: it is... (we shall fill in the press quotes as they come, but be prepared for a lot of metaphorical dialectics...fragile and demonic, sparse yet claustrophobic, exhilarating and freakish... yet in a strange way, comfortingly normal - we know a guy who works for the Daily Star and he's writing all this stuff up for us). It shall be monumental. It shall be significant. It shall be different.
i thanks for the add! How you doing? Come by to talk anytime as we do like to chat, how did you find us? Take it easy love your new friends Voodoo vegas xx www.myspace.com/voodoovegas
ah good to see you're still going guys :) i'll admit i haven't listened in a while but If I Had You is still a big fave of mine. got the album somewhere :) x
Hi, My new album "Songs From The Films Of David Lynch" is out now.
"Truly unsettling and perplexingly brilliant... testament to both the quality of Lynch’s soundtracks and Truax’s talents" - The Skinny
"Truax is paying homage to a kindred spirit with this album. It's the best kind of tribute – affectionate and respectful, but with its own quirks and imaginative leaps and its own distinct identity." -The Scotsman