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The Mainliners = The Greenhornes + The Go + The Hives + The Sights + The Mooney Suzuki.
These guys are an excellent garage rock band that has some amazing
hip-shaking hooks and beats. Backed with an excellent rhythm section,
the lead singer takes center stage with an R&B vocal style that is solid
with its James Brown- style screams and Jim Morrison baritone.
Think of The Who and The Kingsmen playing today in their teens,
still writing solid tracks that are both danceable and snotty.
Although garage is a term that is being loosely thrown around these days,
The Mainliners are the real deal. They know that garage is about
an explosive energy that is both simple but not formulistic—an
attacking rock'n'roll record that will carve them a niche beside
some of the greatest and wildest of today's rock movements. This one is a winner that keeps on hitting.
Slug Mag - May 05
Despite their own claim that they “aren’t concerned with the image or
having the proper haircut”, The Mainliners DO have the looks, and even
a bit too much of a gloss’n’floss on the album artwork, which almost
suggests just another bunch of contemporary garage wanna-bees, missing the actual
point. But, after digging a bit deeper into the content, you realise that they
happen to be a more than satisfactory continuation of the Swedish garage-beat
revival, started way back in the eighties by the likes of The Stomachmouths,
The Crimson Shadows and followed by The Strollers and The Maharajas these days.
Actually, the thing about The Mainliners is that they manage to give the obvious
mid-sixties influences a moderndaze feel, sounding kinda like The Hives, had they
been able to deliver what’s called an “all killer no filler”
album, with their growling frontman Robert Billing, giving a run for the money
to anyone .. you name ‘em!
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Even with the slower tunes, they deliver the
goods all right, adding a bit of Animalisms in the opening title tune and “Dead
man’s hall”, or the early punk aesthetics of the young Van Morrison
in “Loosin’ my mind”. As from the second tune “Sinkin’
feeling”, things start to cook with the Kinky riffin’, powered up
with some Motorcity engines, and it continues with what you could call a commercial
garage sound patented by The ‘Watchband, The Standells or The Remains, as
heard in “She’s an overdose”, or later in “The lonely
one” and “Try to bring us down”, while “Daughter of
dimes” might be the best the glammy bubblegum ever gets. “Robber
of your soul” along with “Crocodile roll” delivers some nervous
freakbeat-ish frenzy, and it’s also worth mentioning that “Ordinary
night” could been the sound of the ‘Stones these days, if they were
still having fun. So, don’t let the shiny cover mislead you, this is
mid’60s beat reminiscing at it’s best!
Gora Obradovic - Popism! - May 05
New 7-inches release on Human Bretzel records Cat. ref # HBZ 002
Garage-Rock from Stockholm, Sweden.
2 unreleased tracks recorded in 2006. Only on vinyl 7inch !
limited edition to 630 copies, in silver cover-sleeve.
Release date: July’ 2006
Previous releases: long-playing LP on Get Hip records (USA), 2005
7-inches single on Crusher records, 2004
Available for sell and trade, please contact us !
more
info : www.themainliners.com
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