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The Heavy
titel: The House That Dirt Built
label: Counter Records/Rough Trade
v.ö.: 18.09.2009
format: CD/LP
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The Heavy have been building. With a background in the joys of sampling and a foreground in scuzzy guitar, bass and beaten up drums, with schizo music tastes and a West Country pace, theyâve been building brick by dirty brick. Now theyâd like to welcome you into their beautiful home for a little nose around, a kind of party if you like. And if a little blood gets spilled then thatâs just how it is. Nobody said it was going to be a spread from âHelloâ magazine. It will, though, be the best party youâve ever been to.
âOh No! Not You Againâ starts things off, hitting like the garage-punk monster it is, Shingae Shoniwa of The Noisettes offering up the backing vox on a tune which sounds like Little Richard posssessed by the devil and turned up to 11. Main single, âHow You Like Me Nowâ is pure voodoo-funk. âSixteenâ channels the ghost of Screaminâ Jay into a tawdry tale of Satan and his young bride. âShort Change Heroâ is an epic Spaghetti Western love song calling on the youth to drop their tools. âNo Timeâ combines a filthy break with thundering riffing about losing the love that was supposed to be forever. âLong Way From Homeâ is punk-blues of genuine yearning. âCause For Alarmâ is a reggae/2 Tone stepper, all crunched up and beaten-up for size. âLove Like Thatâ is King Jammys updated Final tune. "What You Want Me To Doâ combines the intensity of Hendrix with an obia ceremony. âStuck,â shows that for all the wide-eyed madness, The Heavy can also come out with the most affecting love songs which effortlessly combine their many influences into something both completely new and utterless timeless.
Mixed and produced by Jim Abiss (best known for his work on the first Arctic Monkeys, Adele and Kasabian) and with Noisettes input on three tracks (The Heavy toured with them and have all became firm friends), âThe House That Dirt Builtâ represents a huge step forward from an already fantastic debut in âGreat Vengeance & Furious Fireâ.
Since then The Heavy have toured the world and, where the first record was sample-based, the new one is much more a product of working as a band. Like the early rock ânâ roll, blues and rhythm and blues which have influenced it, âThe House That Dirt Builtâ is larger than life, funny, terrifying and occasionally beautiful. It is, in fact, a house youâll want to visit again.
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