Download Free Royal Trux Pound For Pound Rar

Download Free Royal Trux Pound For Pound Rar 7,4/10 8852 votes

Download Free Royal Trux Pound For Pound Rar. Sole Supremacy Rif La. On Pound for Pound, Royal Trux's second album within a year, the increasingly. 'Royal Trux' is the debut album by Royal Trux. It was released as an LP in 1988 by Royal Records, then reissued on CD by Drag City in 1993.' - Wikipedia.com.

On Pound for Pound, Royal Trux's second album within a year, the increasingly prolific group revisits the laid-back, scuzzy sound of albums like Thank You and Sweet Sixteen -- albeit with a warmer, cleaner production, not unlike the sound they gave the Make Up's In Mass Mind. Touted by their label as a 'party record,' Pound for Pound comes pretty close to living up to that description, alternating between summery, boogie rock-inspired numbers like 'Fire Hill' and 'Dr. Gone' and more aggressive rockers like 'Accelerator (The Original)' and 'Teenage Murder Mystery.' The Trux also find room for the almost-wistful summer love song 'Sunshine,' as well as the witchy blues-rock of 'Deep Country Sorcerer' and 'Small Thief,' and despite the sound-effects weirdness on 'Platinum Tips' and the trippy flutes on 'Blind Navigator,' this is their most straightforward collection of songs since their Virgin label output. Weighing in at a short and sweet ten tracks, Pound for Pound may not be as combustive or inventive as their recent output, but it reaffirms that there is plenty of room for just plain enjoyment in Royal Trux's subversive agenda. ~ Heather Phares.

Former teenage stoners who yearn for the culturally incorrect Zeppelin records they sold off in college have a dependable friend in Royal Trux. The band has the Drag City stamp of hipster approval, yet they get to make strutting, ballsy guitar rock that channels British Invasion blues, Nuggets-era garage, and mid-70s Aerosmith, all the while pretending that punk never happened. Uchebnik teoriya sudebnoj ekspertizi er rossinskaya zinin. How did Royal Trux get so lucky, to have their 'Brown Sugar' riff and play it, too? Maybe it's because some still look at what they do as some kind of 'commentary' on tired rock conventions, so they slip under the post-modern radar. If earlier, more difficult Royal Trux albums drew from non-mainstream skronk traditions, the albums they've made since leaving Virgin and returning to Drag City have been taking dramatic strides toward Freedom Rock territory. Pound for Pound, their second full-length in less than a year, continues this trend.

Oddly, it's both Royal Trux's most consistent record in some time and their least interesting. This means that while they avoid godawful eight-minute jams like 'Blue is the Frequency' (from last year's Veterans of Disorder) that always seemed tacked on to court the Wire Magazine set, they also fail to produce any breakout, ass-blowing songs like 'I'm Ready' or 'Yo Se!' Instead, we get a capable, uninspired homage at FM rock history.