
With InchFear Is a Cruel MasterInch, Ruby the Hatchet deliver exactly the brain-frying, catchy yet full of raw energy thriller-album that the American trailblazers acclaimed predecessor InchPlanetary Space ChildInch (2017) promised it to be. Five long years have passed since the New Jersey psych-rock squad dropped their last album, but the wait is finally over. Ruby the Hatchet have reached a new peak of writing music as a collective that was hard won through sacrifices and an iron will to get better and to reach a new level each time. The album title, InchFear Is a Cruel MasterInch, duly epitomizes the mood of the lockdown period in which it was written. Accustomed to working together as a group, singer Jillian Taylor, guitarist Johnny Scarps, drummer Owen Stewart, bassist Lake Muir, and organist Sean Hur were forced to spend more time apart than they normally would. InchI read a lot during the pandemic, when I came across the phrase 'fear is a cruel master', Taylor explains. At the time, you could see the fear and how it was holding people back. The title resonates with being in the music community, because it was shaky for everyone - from bands to booking agents to venues. Fear was in the air. Recorded at New Future in Jersey with Paul Ritchie from THE PARLOR MOB, InchFear Is a Cruel MasterInch wasn't as meticulously mapped out as RUBY's previous albums. The band purposely left space for spontaneity and magic moments. Ultimately, the main theme of InchFear Is a Cruel MasterInch is self-reflection. Although these songs were forged in the crucible of world-stopping pestilence, they come with a timeless quality that transcends the moment of their creation. Everything that makes Ruby the Hatchet such an outstanding and wildly loved act even among their peers is there - ranging from those sultry, honey-smoked vocals, via rich yet crisp guitars, to the spirit of rock 'n
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With InchFear Is a Cruel MasterInch, Ruby the Hatchet deliver exactly the brain-frying, catchy yet full of raw energy thriller-album that the American trailblazers acclaimed predecessor InchPlanetary Space ChildInch (2017) promised it to be. Five long years have passed since the New Jersey psych-rock squad dropped their last album, but the wait is finally over. Ruby the Hatchet have reached a new peak of writing music as a collective that was hard won through sacrifices and an iron will to get better and to reach a new level each time. The album title, InchFear Is a Cruel MasterInch, duly epitomizes the mood of the lockdown period in which it was written. Accustomed to working together as a group, singer Jillian Taylor, guitarist Johnny Scarps, drummer Owen Stewart, bassist Lake Muir, and organist Sean Hur were forced to spend more time apart than they normally would. InchI read a lot during the pandemic, when I came across the phrase 'fear is a cruel master', Taylor explains. At the time, you could see the fear and how it was holding people back. The title resonates with being in the music community, because it was shaky for everyone - from bands to booking agents to venues. Fear was in the air. Recorded at New Future in Jersey with Paul Ritchie from THE PARLOR MOB, InchFear Is a Cruel MasterInch wasn't as meticulously mapped out as RUBY's previous albums. The band purposely left space for spontaneity and magic moments. Ultimately, the main theme of InchFear Is a Cruel MasterInch is self-reflection. Although these songs were forged in the crucible of world-stopping pestilence, they come with a timeless quality that transcends the moment of their creation. Everything that makes Ruby the Hatchet such an outstanding and wildly loved act even among their peers is there - ranging from those sultry, honey-smoked vocals, via rich yet crisp guitars, to the spirit of rock 'n

SYSTEM OF A DOWN Title STEAL THIS ALBUM! s the third studio album by Armenian-American heavy metal band System of a Down, released on November 26, 2002 by American Recordings and Columbia Records. Produced by Rick Rubin and Daron Malakian. 2XLP Album Tracks 1. Chic 'N' Stu (Album Version) 2 26 2. Innervision (Album Version) 2 35 3. Bubbles (Album Version) 1 57 4. Boom! (Explicit Version) 2 15 1. Nüguns 2 30 2. A.D.D. (American Dream Denial) (Explicit Version) 3 17 3. Mr. Jack (Explicit Version) 4 10 4. I-E-A-I-A-I-O (Explicit Version) 3 09 1. 36 (Album Version) 0 46 2. Pictures (Album Version) 2 06 3. Highway Song (Album Version) 3 14 4. F*#k the System (Explicit Version) 2 13 5. Ego Brain (Album Version) 3 22 1. Thetawaves (Album Version) 2 37 2. Roulette (Album Version) 3 21 3. Streamline (Album Version) 3 38

Double vinyl LP pressing. 2020 collection, the first-ever official anthology of recordings from the iconic rock duo, Jack and Meg White, is an essential career-spanning collection highlighting 26 previously released songs. From late '90s flashes of brilliance through early 2000s underground anthems, masterful MTV Moon Man moments, Grammy-grabbing greatness, and worldwide stadium chants, the songs here are as wide-ranging as you can imagine. In an era of streaming where the idea of a Greatest Hits album may seem irrelevant that an act's most streamed songs are considered their de facto InchhitsInch we wholeheartedly believe that great bands deserve Greatest Hits and that a large part of Third Man Records and The White Stripes' successes have been built on zigging when the rest of the music business is zagging. Thus, for a great band with great fans, a greatest hits compilation for The White Stripes is not only appropriate, but absolutely necessary. Album Tracks 1. Let's Shake Hands 2. The Big Three Killed My Baby 3. Fell in Love with a Girl 4. Hello Operator 5. I'm Slowly Turning Into You 6. The Hardest Button to Button 7. The Nurse 1. Screwdriver 2. Dead Leaves and the Dirty Ground 3. Death Letter 4. We're Going to Be Friends 5. The Denial Twist 6. I Just Don't Know What to Do with Myself 7. Astro 1. Conquest 2. Jolene 3. Hotel Yorba 4. Apple Blossom 5. Blue Orchid 6. Ball and Biscuit 1. I Fought Piranhas 2. I Think I Smell a Rat 3. Icky Thump 4. My Doorbell 5. You're Pretty Good Looking (For a Girl) 6. Seven Nation Army
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| There were no pros for this product— | There were no pros for this product— | Sound Quality, Content | There were no pros for this product— |