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The Dim Locator (Missing Link 1982)




   

Post-Punk and Garage noise but on the same time putting their trigger on the Goth-Rock influences as well; Melbourne's The Birthday Party is a group that you would loved to hate along the fascinating gloomy rock career of the vocalist Nick Cave as his prelude to the next infamous steps in the near future of Goth-Rock roots after this band gone. As this last album of them sounded heavily inspired by Southern Goth State of America style like an Appalachian copulation during the winter and the beats turning up slower, the situations never shifting from under the sorrow and seems like there's no hope clinging on the frozen leaves out there anymore but luckily, there's also a hot-rod buzzing of chaos reveals through Junkyard (the album) and you might be smiling before decided to suicide yourself right after the musicians like Mick Harvey (guitars, percussion, drums, saxophone), Tracy Pew (bass), Phil Calvert (drums) or Rowland S. Howard finishing their performance through Dead Joe (co written by Nick' girlfriend Anita Lane), Several Sins, Big-Jesus-Trash-Can, Kiss Me Black and Kewpie Doll. Take the razor and cut the veins slowly - let it bleed and think about the very worst of your time or jsut make it quick by burn down the house with you on it ...





Junkyard:
https://youtu.be/Q88nEF9cbbk

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