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Dark Blue "Start Of The World"
Dark Blue follow up their debut LP, âPure Realityâ, with âStart Of The Worldâ (12XU) â a soundtrack of a decaying United States. Each song drips with the realities of atrocities happening all around us ; John Sharkey III (Vocals, Guitar) pushes Dark Blue far beyond the post-punk meets oi sound they perfected on their earlier releases, and adds elements of brit-pop and shoegaze. Recorded by Jeff Zeigler (Kurt Vile, Nothing), âStart Of The Worldâ is a pop album that makes no apologies.
Boot stomping opener âUnion of Buffoons,â sets the political tone for this album with an anthem for workersâ rights. Sharkeyâs biting lyrics: âYou canât fight this, you canât winâŚscrew you once, theyâll screw you twice,â is a reference to human expendability in the face of deregulation and the stagnancy of labor rights. âNever Wanted to Hurt Youâ is a pop song in the highest order with guts and an undeniable chorus that would make Noel Gallagher jealous even at his most jaded.
The 50â˛s doo-woop and surf rock sound of âBombs on the Beachâ initially feels like a left turn for the band, evoking a playful innocence against a sunny backdrop. But the lyrics prove this is truly a Dark Blue song, tearing through any cheerfulness as jarring and abrupt as words can be to describe the reality of dropping missiles on a beach of unsuspecting Palestinian children. Sharkeyâs voice is heavy with the despair of survivorâs guilt: âNow Iâm holding my babyâs hand, as he lies bleeding to death in the sand.â This is another pointed song full of sentiment as much as it is an impassioned call for accountability for the crimes against humanity in the Gaza Strip.
While this album shows off new and varying degrees of Sharkeyâs vocal intensity, Andrew Mackie Nelson (Bass, Ceremony) and Michael Sneeringer (Drums, Strand of Oaks) shine, guiding the songs in ways other releases havenât shown before . Tracks such as âBe Gone Everyoneâ and âWestern Frontâ underscore just how comfortable the band has gotten.
âStart Of The Worldâ is the kind of record that Dark Blue has always promised: a collection of smart, fully realized songs that tell real stories. With the world falling apart around us, Dark Blue continues to give voice to neglected perspectives, many unnerving but all necessary to hear. We need a defiant record like this to remind us that just as there was start to all of this destruction, there can also be an end.
Track Listing:Â
01. Union Of BuffoonsÂ
02. Be Gone EveryoneÂ
03. I Never Wanted To Hurt You
04. Paralyzed By FearÂ
05. You Know WhoÂ
06. Bombs On The BeachÂ
07. Tired Of The PoorÂ
08. Western Front Academy
Boot stomping opener âUnion of Buffoons,â sets the political tone for this album with an anthem for workersâ rights. Sharkeyâs biting lyrics: âYou canât fight this, you canât winâŚscrew you once, theyâll screw you twice,â is a reference to human expendability in the face of deregulation and the stagnancy of labor rights. âNever Wanted to Hurt Youâ is a pop song in the highest order with guts and an undeniable chorus that would make Noel Gallagher jealous even at his most jaded.
The 50â˛s doo-woop and surf rock sound of âBombs on the Beachâ initially feels like a left turn for the band, evoking a playful innocence against a sunny backdrop. But the lyrics prove this is truly a Dark Blue song, tearing through any cheerfulness as jarring and abrupt as words can be to describe the reality of dropping missiles on a beach of unsuspecting Palestinian children. Sharkeyâs voice is heavy with the despair of survivorâs guilt: âNow Iâm holding my babyâs hand, as he lies bleeding to death in the sand.â This is another pointed song full of sentiment as much as it is an impassioned call for accountability for the crimes against humanity in the Gaza Strip.
While this album shows off new and varying degrees of Sharkeyâs vocal intensity, Andrew Mackie Nelson (Bass, Ceremony) and Michael Sneeringer (Drums, Strand of Oaks) shine, guiding the songs in ways other releases havenât shown before . Tracks such as âBe Gone Everyoneâ and âWestern Frontâ underscore just how comfortable the band has gotten.
âStart Of The Worldâ is the kind of record that Dark Blue has always promised: a collection of smart, fully realized songs that tell real stories. With the world falling apart around us, Dark Blue continues to give voice to neglected perspectives, many unnerving but all necessary to hear. We need a defiant record like this to remind us that just as there was start to all of this destruction, there can also be an end.
Track Listing:Â
01. Union Of BuffoonsÂ
02. Be Gone EveryoneÂ
03. I Never Wanted To Hurt You
04. Paralyzed By FearÂ
05. You Know WhoÂ
06. Bombs On The BeachÂ
07. Tired Of The PoorÂ
08. Western Front Academy
Dark Blue follow up their debut LP, âPure Realityâ, with âStart Of The Worldâ (12XU) â a soundtrack of a decaying United States. Each song drips with the realities of atrocities happening all around us ; John Sharkey III (Vocals, Guitar) pushes Dark Blue far beyond the post-punk meets oi sound they perfected on their earlier releases, and adds elements of brit-pop and shoegaze. Recorded by Jeff Zeigler (Kurt Vile, Nothing), âStart Of The Worldâ is a pop album that makes no apologies.
Boot stomping opener âUnion of Buffoons,â sets the political tone for this album with an anthem for workersâ rights. Sharkeyâs biting lyrics: âYou canât fight this, you canât winâŚscrew you once, theyâll screw you twice,â is a reference to human expendability in the face of deregulation and the stagnancy of labor rights. âNever Wanted to Hurt Youâ is a pop song in the highest order with guts and an undeniable chorus that would make Noel Gallagher jealous even at his most jaded.
The 50â˛s doo-woop and surf rock sound of âBombs on the Beachâ initially feels like a left turn for the band, evoking a playful innocence against a sunny backdrop. But the lyrics prove this is truly a Dark Blue song, tearing through any cheerfulness as jarring and abrupt as words can be to describe the reality of dropping missiles on a beach of unsuspecting Palestinian children. Sharkeyâs voice is heavy with the despair of survivorâs guilt: âNow Iâm holding my babyâs hand, as he lies bleeding to death in the sand.â This is another pointed song full of sentiment as much as it is an impassioned call for accountability for the crimes against humanity in the Gaza Strip.
While this album shows off new and varying degrees of Sharkeyâs vocal intensity, Andrew Mackie Nelson (Bass, Ceremony) and Michael Sneeringer (Drums, Strand of Oaks) shine, guiding the songs in ways other releases havenât shown before . Tracks such as âBe Gone Everyoneâ and âWestern Frontâ underscore just how comfortable the band has gotten.
âStart Of The Worldâ is the kind of record that Dark Blue has always promised: a collection of smart, fully realized songs that tell real stories. With the world falling apart around us, Dark Blue continues to give voice to neglected perspectives, many unnerving but all necessary to hear. We need a defiant record like this to remind us that just as there was start to all of this destruction, there can also be an end.
Track Listing:Â
01. Union Of BuffoonsÂ
02. Be Gone EveryoneÂ
03. I Never Wanted To Hurt You
04. Paralyzed By FearÂ
05. You Know WhoÂ
06. Bombs On The BeachÂ
07. Tired Of The PoorÂ
08. Western Front Academy
Boot stomping opener âUnion of Buffoons,â sets the political tone for this album with an anthem for workersâ rights. Sharkeyâs biting lyrics: âYou canât fight this, you canât winâŚscrew you once, theyâll screw you twice,â is a reference to human expendability in the face of deregulation and the stagnancy of labor rights. âNever Wanted to Hurt Youâ is a pop song in the highest order with guts and an undeniable chorus that would make Noel Gallagher jealous even at his most jaded.
The 50â˛s doo-woop and surf rock sound of âBombs on the Beachâ initially feels like a left turn for the band, evoking a playful innocence against a sunny backdrop. But the lyrics prove this is truly a Dark Blue song, tearing through any cheerfulness as jarring and abrupt as words can be to describe the reality of dropping missiles on a beach of unsuspecting Palestinian children. Sharkeyâs voice is heavy with the despair of survivorâs guilt: âNow Iâm holding my babyâs hand, as he lies bleeding to death in the sand.â This is another pointed song full of sentiment as much as it is an impassioned call for accountability for the crimes against humanity in the Gaza Strip.
While this album shows off new and varying degrees of Sharkeyâs vocal intensity, Andrew Mackie Nelson (Bass, Ceremony) and Michael Sneeringer (Drums, Strand of Oaks) shine, guiding the songs in ways other releases havenât shown before . Tracks such as âBe Gone Everyoneâ and âWestern Frontâ underscore just how comfortable the band has gotten.
âStart Of The Worldâ is the kind of record that Dark Blue has always promised: a collection of smart, fully realized songs that tell real stories. With the world falling apart around us, Dark Blue continues to give voice to neglected perspectives, many unnerving but all necessary to hear. We need a defiant record like this to remind us that just as there was start to all of this destruction, there can also be an end.
Track Listing:Â
01. Union Of BuffoonsÂ
02. Be Gone EveryoneÂ
03. I Never Wanted To Hurt You
04. Paralyzed By FearÂ
05. You Know WhoÂ
06. Bombs On The BeachÂ
07. Tired Of The PoorÂ
08. Western Front Academy
$5.25
Original: $14.99
-65%Dark Blue "Start Of The World"â
$14.99
$5.25Description
Dark Blue follow up their debut LP, âPure Realityâ, with âStart Of The Worldâ (12XU) â a soundtrack of a decaying United States. Each song drips with the realities of atrocities happening all around us ; John Sharkey III (Vocals, Guitar) pushes Dark Blue far beyond the post-punk meets oi sound they perfected on their earlier releases, and adds elements of brit-pop and shoegaze. Recorded by Jeff Zeigler (Kurt Vile, Nothing), âStart Of The Worldâ is a pop album that makes no apologies.
Boot stomping opener âUnion of Buffoons,â sets the political tone for this album with an anthem for workersâ rights. Sharkeyâs biting lyrics: âYou canât fight this, you canât winâŚscrew you once, theyâll screw you twice,â is a reference to human expendability in the face of deregulation and the stagnancy of labor rights. âNever Wanted to Hurt Youâ is a pop song in the highest order with guts and an undeniable chorus that would make Noel Gallagher jealous even at his most jaded.
The 50â˛s doo-woop and surf rock sound of âBombs on the Beachâ initially feels like a left turn for the band, evoking a playful innocence against a sunny backdrop. But the lyrics prove this is truly a Dark Blue song, tearing through any cheerfulness as jarring and abrupt as words can be to describe the reality of dropping missiles on a beach of unsuspecting Palestinian children. Sharkeyâs voice is heavy with the despair of survivorâs guilt: âNow Iâm holding my babyâs hand, as he lies bleeding to death in the sand.â This is another pointed song full of sentiment as much as it is an impassioned call for accountability for the crimes against humanity in the Gaza Strip.
While this album shows off new and varying degrees of Sharkeyâs vocal intensity, Andrew Mackie Nelson (Bass, Ceremony) and Michael Sneeringer (Drums, Strand of Oaks) shine, guiding the songs in ways other releases havenât shown before . Tracks such as âBe Gone Everyoneâ and âWestern Frontâ underscore just how comfortable the band has gotten.
âStart Of The Worldâ is the kind of record that Dark Blue has always promised: a collection of smart, fully realized songs that tell real stories. With the world falling apart around us, Dark Blue continues to give voice to neglected perspectives, many unnerving but all necessary to hear. We need a defiant record like this to remind us that just as there was start to all of this destruction, there can also be an end.
Track Listing:Â
01. Union Of BuffoonsÂ
02. Be Gone EveryoneÂ
03. I Never Wanted To Hurt You
04. Paralyzed By FearÂ
05. You Know WhoÂ
06. Bombs On The BeachÂ
07. Tired Of The PoorÂ
08. Western Front Academy
Boot stomping opener âUnion of Buffoons,â sets the political tone for this album with an anthem for workersâ rights. Sharkeyâs biting lyrics: âYou canât fight this, you canât winâŚscrew you once, theyâll screw you twice,â is a reference to human expendability in the face of deregulation and the stagnancy of labor rights. âNever Wanted to Hurt Youâ is a pop song in the highest order with guts and an undeniable chorus that would make Noel Gallagher jealous even at his most jaded.
The 50â˛s doo-woop and surf rock sound of âBombs on the Beachâ initially feels like a left turn for the band, evoking a playful innocence against a sunny backdrop. But the lyrics prove this is truly a Dark Blue song, tearing through any cheerfulness as jarring and abrupt as words can be to describe the reality of dropping missiles on a beach of unsuspecting Palestinian children. Sharkeyâs voice is heavy with the despair of survivorâs guilt: âNow Iâm holding my babyâs hand, as he lies bleeding to death in the sand.â This is another pointed song full of sentiment as much as it is an impassioned call for accountability for the crimes against humanity in the Gaza Strip.
While this album shows off new and varying degrees of Sharkeyâs vocal intensity, Andrew Mackie Nelson (Bass, Ceremony) and Michael Sneeringer (Drums, Strand of Oaks) shine, guiding the songs in ways other releases havenât shown before . Tracks such as âBe Gone Everyoneâ and âWestern Frontâ underscore just how comfortable the band has gotten.
âStart Of The Worldâ is the kind of record that Dark Blue has always promised: a collection of smart, fully realized songs that tell real stories. With the world falling apart around us, Dark Blue continues to give voice to neglected perspectives, many unnerving but all necessary to hear. We need a defiant record like this to remind us that just as there was start to all of this destruction, there can also be an end.
Track Listing:Â
01. Union Of BuffoonsÂ
02. Be Gone EveryoneÂ
03. I Never Wanted To Hurt You
04. Paralyzed By FearÂ
05. You Know WhoÂ
06. Bombs On The BeachÂ
07. Tired Of The PoorÂ
08. Western Front Academy












