
Punk thugs-n-harmony.
Whole Wheat Bread - Punk Life EPPosted by Mission Media on 06-Apr-07 @ 02:08 PM
[3/5] Whole Wheat Bread's 2005 debut, Minority Rules, proved that the all-black Jacksonville, Florida-based trio were much more than a cross-cultural novelty-the group could play Green Day-esque white-boy punk as good as any, um, white boy. And there was more: The three hip-hop bonus tracks on Minority hinted at future genre blending, so it's only logical that Punk Life, WWB's new EP, further obliterates any remaining racial constructs existing in their music. Featuring three new punk-styled originals and three crunky remakes of "Dirty South" classics (with new verses written by the band), Punk Life offers a bit of the familiar (pop-punky opener "206") and something a little more ghetto-dangerous, like the retread of Bone Crusher's "Never Scared," complete with a chorus riff straight outta Metallica's "Creeping Death." When both worlds fuse into one-notably on the politically charged "Symbol Of Hope"-WWB's full scene-blurring wizardry is revealed. The only question: Can you hang? (FIGHTING; fightingrecords.com) Brendan Manley
Official Website: http://www.fightingrecords.com
|
Also in this issue:
- (+44)
- THE EVENS
- KYLESA
- ...And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of Dead
- TRIUMPH OF LETHARGY SKINNED ALIVE TO DEATH
- ISOBEL CAMPBELL
- MÚM
- PINEBENDER
- ANDREW DOUGLAS ROTHBARD
- SOFT COMPLEX
- STEPHEN BRODSKY’S OCTAVE MUSEUM
- Tahiti 80
- Tristeza
- White Magic
- Brand New
- Amon Amarth
- Dream Evil
- I Killed The Prom Queen
- Imperial
- Shook Ones
- Stand Before The Firing Squad
- Sunno))) & Boris
- Various Artists
- Dmonstrations
- Fat Jon & Styrofoam
- Subtitle
- Wolf Eyes With John Wiese
- Youngblood Brass Band
- Amity
- Billy Reese Peters
- The Generators
- Giddy Motors
- Hot Snakes
- Scout's Honor
- Stole Your Woman
- Various Artists
- Colour Revolt
- Ronnie Day
- The Dear Hunter
- Foo Fighters
- Klaxons
- Last Conservative
- Locksley
- The Transit War
- Vains Of Jenna
- Incubus
- Tenacious D
- Tim Barry
- Other sections...



























[3/5] Whole Wheat Bread's 2005 debut, Minority Rules, proved that the all-black Jacksonville, Florida-based trio were much more than a cross-cultural novelty-the group could play Green Day-esque white-boy punk as good as any, um, white boy. And there was more: The three hip-hop bonus tracks on Minority hinted at future genre blending, so it's only logical that Punk Life, WWB's new EP, further obliterates any remaining racial constructs existing in their music. Featuring three new punk-styled originals and three crunky remakes of "Dirty South" classics (with new verses written by the band), Punk Life offers a bit of the familiar (pop-punky opener "206") and something a little more ghetto-dangerous, like the retread of Bone Crusher's "Never Scared," complete with a chorus riff straight outta Metallica's "Creeping Death." When both worlds fuse into one-notably on the politically charged "Symbol Of Hope"-WWB's full scene-blurring wizardry is revealed. The only question: Can you hang? (FIGHTING; fightingrecords.com) Brendan Manley
Official Website: 
