THE
BANGKOK FIVE RETURNS WITH
‘WE LOVE WHAT KILLS US’
DUE OUT MAY 13
ON LONG LIVE CRIME RECORDS
February 12, 2008 --
Revered by Revolver magazine as “one more band you
should know about,” The Bangkok Five returns with their sophomore
album, WE LOVE WHAT KILLS US, due out May 13 on Long Live
Crime Records (distributed by MRI/ Red).
“These songs were
written by a band on the road being a band,” explains lead
guitarist Sweeney. “There is a brutality that you will hear
in every guitar note, word and drum beat.”
WE LOVE WHAT KILLS
US is the follow-up to the band’s 2006 debut, WHO'S
GONNA TAKE US ALIVE? (Universal). The first single from that
album, “Spread Eagle,” hit # 1 on several tastemaker
indie rock radio stations across the country, leading to tours of
Europe, Canada and the U.S. with bands such as Hot Hot Heat, The
Cult, The Stooges, The Bronx, Buckcherry, (International) Noise
Conspiracy and Papa Roach.
The sophomore effort marks the first time the band--Frost (vocals),
Sweeney (lead guitar), Coatez (bass), Blanco (drums), Bobby S. (guitar)--will
release music in two languages, English and Spanish.
As vocalist Frost explains
the decision to make a bilingual album: “I left for Europe
when I was a teenager to escape the banality of California life
and the feeling that I had no future. I ended up in Spain and lived
there for a few years, learning the language, the music, and the
lifestyle. I started to DJ at various clubs and picked up a real
love and deep respect for the scene. When I came back to Los Angeles,
I discovered the Latino culture I loved was here all along, living,
breathing and making great art. It was a natural progression to
translate WE LOVE WHAT KILLS US into Spanish. This record
is about L.A. and what goes on here. To ignore the Latin culture
and its people would be to ignore the real Los Angeles.”
Produced by the band
along with Manny Nieto (The Mars Volta, The Circle Jerks, The Breeders),
WE LOVE WHAT KILLS US was recorded live to tape at Wetandry
Studios in Echo Park, California. Manny also engineered and recorded
the album.
“When you record
to tape, you have to play everything perfectly,” says Frost.
“It keeps the music really honest. We rehearsed until we felt
we would go insane. In the world of Pro Tools, you can fix little
things like a missing kick drum, or a bad note. The world of tape
does not forgive anything, so you have to play it right or do it
again. We used all of our own gear to keep it sounding like we do
when we perform live. It’s great because you can hear buzzing
all over the tracks. There’s no sterility here. This is warm
and fuzzy analog music.”
The songs on WE LOVE
WHAT KILLS US deal with the pain and uncertainty in the lives
of the band as an exhaustive tour in support of their debut album
left them with disrupted personal lives. Frost’s girlfriend
had to be put in rehab for drug addiction, while drummer Blanco
came home to an empty house and a note from his fiancé wishing
him luck in his life. She had enough of his rock & roll lifestyle
and decided to leave him.
One song in particular,
"Outlines of Us," stems from a haunting, yet all too realistic
experience while out on the road. “It’s a torch song
written about some ghosts we met at a flop house/hotel back east,”
says Frost. “We stayed the night at this shit hole and when
we woke up in the morning, we realized we all had the same exact
dream about hair, blood and brains that were splattered all over
the walls of our room. We concluded there had been a murder/suicide
there. So I romanticized a classic, archetypical ‘if I can’t
have you, no one will’ story about the anti-hero murdering
his one and only true love, when he realizes she doesn't share his
desire. The spurned lover then destroys everything, including himself,
when he realizes she cannot be his.”
For Frost, The Bangkok
Five is the only way he knows how to live, complete with all the
ups and downs: “I am homeless and broke because of this thing
I have to do called music. My father sent me to a shrink a couple
of years ago to find out what was ‘wrong with me.’ After
an hour, the psychologist concluded that I had ‘John the Baptist
Syndrome.’ I will do this or I will go crazy, or kill myself.
I consider myself afflicted. I owe the government thousands of dollars.
I don’t have a driver’s license because it’s been
revoked. I don’t have medical insurance. I have warrants out
for my arrest. I don’t care...I am a punk in the true sense
of the word. The music I make has destroyed my life.”
Hence the album title:
WE LOVE WHAT KILLS US.
www.thebangkokfive.com
www.myspace.com/thebangkokfive
###
Contact:
Amanda Cagan
ABC Public Relations
818 990 6876
acaganpr@aol.com
The Bangkok Five is managed
by Tom Vitorino Management, and represented by The Kirby Organization
worldwide.
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