“The weight of the world is weighing down on us like never before. ‘Heavyweight’, as most of the songs on this album, laments about a growing sense of discomfort in one’s own skin as one sees the world as we know it is coming to a halt and algorithmically designed divisiveness makes way for neo-facism.” -Iguana Death Cult
“The weight of the world is weighing down on us like never before. ‘Heavyweight’, as most of the songs on this album, laments about a growing sense of discomfort in one’s own skin as one sees the world as we know it is coming to a halt and algorithmically designed divisiveness makes way for neo-facism.” -Iguana Death Cult
With a new album, Thunderbird Lodge, on the way, I sat down and caught up with The Flavor That Kills guitarist, singer, and lyricist Ryan Corcoran, to find out more about the band’s journey and the story behind the new album.
Over their eighteen years as a band, Jim Putnam’s Los Angeles based collective Radar Brothers proved to be a model of consistency and melancholic, sun-baked comfort. Defying conventional, perpetual myths that artists must consciously reinvent themselves, a deep dive retrospective at the band’s working class trajectory reveals a singular path on the perennial edge of a larger, opportunistic breakthrough.
Over their eighteen years as a band, Jim Putnam’s Los Angeles based collective Radar Brothers proved to be a model of consistency and melancholic, sun-baked comfort. Defying conventional, perpetual myths that artists must consciously reinvent themselves, a deep dive retrospective at the band’s working class trajectory reveals a singular path on the perennial edge of a larger, opportunistic breakthrough.