Showing posts with label Dig Your Grave. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dig Your Grave. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

The Pharmacy's "Dig Your Grave" Gets A Great Review On The Owl Mag


"The beauty of the EP is that you gain insight into a band’s mission and response to what their fans want. With Dig Your Grave, The Pharmacy
‘s newest EP, they’re giving their fans more of the cool psychedelic garage rock that they know and love, and as a new listener, I’m curious to hear more." Read on at The Owl Mag.

Friday, February 3, 2012

Stream The Pharmacy's EP "Dig Your Grave" On Sound On The Sound

"In four short songs The Pharmacy cover a lot of ground in the garage. “Dig Your Grave” will have you simultaneously wanting to thrash and twist. "Pines" is a light cotton-candy confection until a slicing guitar solo really satisfies the sweet tooth. Instrumental "Lazy Bones" is a doped up slow dance, making out in the corner as you sway a step behind the rhythm. And EP-ender "Burn All Yr Bridges," a demo from the band’s time in New Orleans, sleepily seethes about Seattle from afar with equal parts beauty and bitterness." Listen to "Dig Your Grave" now here.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Vice Premieres The Pharmacy's "Dig Your Grave" Video!

"The song manages to be incredibly catchy while remaining oddly hostile. Imagine what the British Invasion would have sounded like if the aggression been literal. In the video, the trio (which also features Stefan Rubicz and Scottie Yoder) murder a woman in a grainy graveyard and perform, clad in face paint and white robes, against a hellscape of burning amps and drum sets. It’s all shot on 16mm film and has a creepy, ghostly quality to it." Read Vice's full run down on The Pharmacy's video.

THE PHARMACY - DIG YOUR GRAVE (MUSIC VIDEO) from brendhan bowers on Vimeo.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Impose Magazine Gives The Pharmacy's "Dig Your Grave" A Listen

"The first two songs from the EP are pure sunny garage rock with quite a bit of energy as well. The b-side consists of an earlier demo and an acoustic song from the band's time in New Orleans. It is of the less rambunctious variety, making it akin to whichever side of a yin yang symbol is black." Listen now on Impose.