1.
Who
are Polish Club?
Polish Club are a bluesy/soulful garage rock duo from Sydney,
Australia. Come Party (Feb’17) is the
second single from their second album Alright
Already (March’17).
2. What's Come Party sound like?
Soul singing, pop harmonies, furious drumming and steady garage-rock riffs all come together into a party anthem. Come Party is an unhinged rush of rock'n'roll.
3. Who do Polish Club sound like?
The Vines, Death From Above 1979 and Black Lips.
4. What have the press said about Come Party?
“An
unstoppable powerhouse” – The AU Review.
“Rollicking
garage rock” – Tone Deaf.
“A
non-stop sweaty fest of garage-rattling rhythms and gut-busting singing” –
Triple J.
5. Which bands have influenced Polish Club?
The White Stripes, Otis Reading, Blackstreet, The Vines and Mariah Carey.
6. Why should I give Come Party a gander?
Because you love soul vocals and garage guitar.
7. What are Polish Party's best songs?
Come Party is the top of the pile. But don't eschew Beat Up, Beeping, or My House.
8. Any more words?
Polish Club recorded five or so songs in Los Angeles at the behest of Rob Cavallo (producer of Green Day, Goo Goo Dolls and My Chemical Romance) but felt the songs weren’t true to the band so they didn’t release them.
Polish Club recorded five or so songs in Los Angeles at the behest of Rob Cavallo (producer of Green Day, Goo Goo Dolls and My Chemical Romance) but felt the songs weren’t true to the band so they didn’t release them.
“Oh
baby I ain’t foolin’,
So
honey quit your droolin’”
The Vines are a garage rock band from Sydney, Australia.
Making a fucking racket since 1994 they have recorded six albums together. The
Vines are similar to The Hives, The Von Bondies and The Subways. They are influenced by The Kinks, Nirvana and Queens Of The Stone Age. Get Free is the second single from their debut album Highly Evolved (2002), both their most commercially and critically popular album. NME voted Highly Evolved their second most popular album of the year and Pitchfork described Get Free as starting “with
a riff that sounds like revving up a lawnmower” and having an “extra catchy bridge tacked on to
make it an even bigger hit.” Get Free is two minutes of no-nonsense garage rock'n'roll.
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