Darkness Rains+ LP REPRESS LIMITED TO 500 COPIES w DL COUPON + LIMITED EDITION LP REPRESS ON 180G WHITE VINYL + LP COMES WITH A FOLDED 11. 7" x 16. 5" POSTER INSERT + TRACK 10 ON THE LP FEATURES A LOCKED GROOVE + INCLUDES IMMEDIATE DOWNLOAD OF FULL ALBUM + CASSETTE COMES WITH DOWNLOAD COUPON + CD HOUSED IN A CD WALLET At the core of Death Valley Girls, vocalist multi instrumentalist Bonnie Bloomgarden and guitarist Larry Schemel channel a modern spin on Fun Houses
Shopping security
Each payment you make on thelockerguy is secured with strict SSL encryption and PCI DSS data protection protocols
product description
Why choose thelockerguy wholesale?
+ LP REPRESS LIMITED TO 500 COPIES w/ DL COUPON
+ LIMITED EDITION LP REPRESS ON 180G WHITE VINYL
+ LP COMES WITH A FOLDED 11.7" x 16.5" POSTER INSERT
+ TRACK 10 ON THE LP FEATURES A LOCKED GROOVE
+ INCLUDES IMMEDIATE DOWNLOAD OF FULL ALBUM
+ CASSETTE COMES WITH DOWNLOAD COUPON
+ CD HOUSED IN A CD WALLET
At the core of Death Valley Girls, vocalist/multi-instrumentalist Bonnie Bloomgarden and guitarist Larry Schemel channel a modern spin on Fun House’s sonic exorcisms, ZZ Top’s desert-blasted riffage, and Sabbath’s occult menace. On their third album Darkness Rains, Death Valley Girls churn out the hypercharged scuzzy rock every generation yearns for, but there is a more subversive force percolating beneath the surface that imbues the band with an exhilarating cosmic energy.
Album opener “More Dead” is a rousing wake up call, with a hypnotic guitar riff and an intoxicating blown-out solo underscoring Bloomgarden’s proclamation that you’re “more dead than alive.” The pace builds with “(One Less Thing) Before I Die”, a distillate of Detroit’s proto-punk sound. At track three, Death Valley Girls hit their stride with “Disaster (Is What We’re After)”, a rager that takes the most boisterous moments off Exile On Main Street and injects it with Zeppelin’s devil’s-note blues. Darkness Rains retains its intoxicating convocations across ten tracks, climaxing with the hypnotic guitar drones and cult-like chants of “TV In Jail On Mars”.