other titles...
See also...
- Champagne Taste
- Nothing Romantic
- Waiting For The Rain
- Look What You've Done To Me
- I Knew Love
- Take Out Your Insides
- There's A Part I Can't Get Back
- Please Rewind
- Shooting Star
- Sunshine
- No Bills In Heaven (Bonus 12")
- Raggedy Anne (Bonus 12")
- Lady Daydream (Bonus 12")
- Crashing Highs (Bonus 12")
- Watch You Walk Away (Bonus 12")
Sunflower Bean
Mortal Primetime
Lucky Number
Sunflower Bean has never fit neatly into a scene, and 'Mortal Primetime' will remind listeners why.
Four albums in and the New York trio have never sounded so much like themselves - 'Mortal Primetime' is awash with grungy power pop licked with enough melodic insistence to worm its way into both your head and your heart. Sunflower Bean has never fit neatly into a scene, and 'Mortal Primetime' will remind listeners why. They draw from a wide swath of influences most bands wouldn’t dare namecheck together in a sentence, and that daringness has made them undefinable. “Sometimes I think of this record as Belle and Sebastian meets Alice in Chains,” Cumming says. “In the past, we’ve been told to tone down who we are, and this album is our refusal to be anything but ourselves,” Faber says ,“It’s the purest expression of who we are.”
Recording vocals for the album’s power-pop opener and lead single, “Champagne Taste,” Cumming channelled Iggy Pop circa 'The Idiot', whilst later, on “Look What You’ve Done to Me,” her staggering range conjures the unsettling madness and whimsy of Kate Bush. And on “Nothing Romantic,” soaring power cords harken back to arena-ready hits of the ‘70s and ‘80s by Heart, Pat Benatar, or Joan Jett. These songs are the most honest of Sunflower Bean’s career – unvarnished, exposed - and by embracing discordance and uncertainty, they have created the bravest album of an already storied career.
When Sunflower Bean set out to make music together as teenagers, they knew they wanted to go the distance, to create something that could stand up to the unforgiving passage of time. However fleeting this existence is, with 'Mortal Primetime', Sunflower Bean offers up another monument that will withstand the weathering of time.