Friday, 25 March 2016

Sticky Fingers - Outcast At Last






1.    Who are these crackups?

Sticky Fingers are a reggae rock band with psych stylings and they roll out of Sydney, Australia. The band have two long players in the vault and Outcast At Last (March’16) is the lead single from their third album due this year.
 
2. What’s shaking the foundations?

Outcast At Last is a massive reggae rock tune with a side of the Manchester Sound as practiced by The Happy Mondays, Stone Roses and others of that ilk. Outcast At Last bubbles along like big farts hammered out in the bath and it oozes stomp and swagger.


3. Who do Sticky Fingers sound like?

The new tune Outcast At Last is a little bit Arctic Monkeys-esque say Music Feed.


4. What have the muppets in the press said about Outcast At Last?

“A stanking groove” – ABC.

“A big wall of sound” – Project U.

“Packing a stomping groove riff” – Music Feeds.






5. Which bands have put the bobble in Sticky Fingers’ hip shakers?

The bands that influenced Sticky Fingers are Fat Freddy's Drop, Gorillaz, Pink Floyd, King Tide, Cold Chisel, You Am I, Arctic Monkeys and Red Hot Chili Peppers. Sticky Fingers have expressed mad love for The Clash's sprawling masterpiece, the triple disc, Sandinista.


6. Why should I give Outcast At Last a whirl?

Modern Mancy gold from an Ocker reggae rocker. What's not to love! Outcast At Last is as funky as James Brown's dick cheese in his crazy days.

 
7. Do Sticky Fingers have any more of these bouncers?

Gold Snafu is the place to start and How To Fly is, as they say, so laidback it's horizontal. There's plenty to crack on with.


8. Any more words fool?

The new third album is being mixed and produced by Dann Hume from Evermore who has done same for Lisa Mitchell.





“It’s the mystic that surrounds her enema she can’t control”











It would be rude not to crack on with some of New Zealand’s Hallelujah Picassos. Started in 1988 as a garage punk band they embraced a wild variey of styles including punk, reggae, rap, ska, thrash, jazz and pop. Leaving four long players as their legacy Hallelujah Picassos are most famous for their reggae tune Rewind (1994) but Clap Your Hands (1989) is a crazed gospel, punk, dub, slice of glittering gold their fans love best.  

“Shoot it up, shoot it up, shoot it up for Jesus”

 



 





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