Luke, Dan and The Raid – Out Of The Blue (INDIE EXCLUSIVE / COLOR VINYL) (Vinyl)

$19.98

Out of stock

SKU: 607396531615 Category:

Description

Catalog # : LP-NW-5316LE

Artist : Luke, Dan and The Raid

UPC : 607396531615

Label : New West Records

Street Date : 10/11/2019

Genre:

Rock

Style:

Indie Rock

TracklistShow Credits

A1 Farrah Mantra 2:24

A2 Disco Is As Disco Does 2:40

A3 Exoskeleton 2:46

A4 Fool 3:11

A5 Money Mouth 2:55

B1 Golden Age 4:08

B2 Rita Repulsa 3:31

B3 Maybe It's The Drugs 3:04

B4 Black Cat Heavy Metal 2:53

B5 Last Goodbyes 3:16

“It's like a coming-of-age crisis,” says Daniel Shultz about Out of the Blue, the messy and melodic debut album from his band, Dan Luke and The Raid. “It’s about being in that space in your 20s where you’re trying to get your shit together and figure things out in life. You’re dealing with your problems”—the singer, songwriter and guitarist pauses—“even as you’re going out and partying and getting into trouble all the time.”

Shultz and his Dan Luke & The Raid band mates know a thing or two about the last part of that equation, as evidenced by the songs and subject matter on Out of the Blue. Throughout the album’s 10 tracks, people are passed out on curbs under neon signs (“Black Cat Heavy Metal”), breaking hearts over rolled-up dollar bills (“Exoskeleton”), leaving baggies lying in passenger seats (“Money Mouth”) and faking smiles and feeling ashamed (“Golden Age”). Legs are bleeding, faces are numb and Shultz declares his band to be the “diamond kings of smut.” All the while, the music throbs and pulses and twitches and buzzes with the energy and enthusiasm and inexperience of youth, bursting with harsh, distorted guitar chords, blown-out synths squiggles and hopped-up rhythms—as well as, on occasion, moments of stunning and sincere melodic beauty.

With the weight and experience of events that have been at times joyful and sad, poignant and puerile, triumphant and tragic, Dan Luke and The Raid continue to carve out their future, one musical moment at a time. “What we want to do is create music, and create music in a way where people feel something,” Shultz says. “And when we see that happening it’s an amazing thing.”