
Musically they are a mercurial bunch too. A blend of droning, tribal rock and roll that takes in Doorsian psychedelia and 60’s garage band, The Dandy Warhol’s dark pop and tips a hat to The Brian Jonestown Massacres free-wheeling sonic journeys. It is sad, beautiful and capacious and speaks to the moment but does so in such an understated way that as a message it is more subversive than rallying. But we have tried rallying, no one listens, maybe the way to engage people is to do so in a way that they don’t realise that they are being education and informed, let them come to their own conclusions, feel that they have made the connection and they might just feel that they have empowered themselves to change.
But if they miss the message they are still being presented with a great song, one which updates the entrenched grooves of the likes of The Velvets or Joy Division for a whole new audience, the latter even more obvious in the more clinical Southern Tribe remix that comes as part of the package.
