
Sacred Money
Off the back of his 2024 EBM meets rockabilly greaser album Moto Zone. Cong Josie returns with a new partner in crime : the legendary Garry Gray, aka Garry Sacred of seminal Aussie swamp-rock outfit Sacred Cowboys. The two met in early 2025 when Cong fessed up to ripping off the Cowboysâ track âNothing Grows in Texasâ on â1300 Scorpioâ, the two recognise a kindred spirit, bonded over their love for Alan Vega and 70âs oz-boogie and next thing you know, weâve got this scorchinâ EP.
The record kicks off with a re-recording mash-up of the aforementioned â1300 Scorpioâ & âNothing Grows in Texasâ in â1300 Texicoâ. Like leather clad twins mysteriously separated by a decade or two, there is an undeniable synchronicity at play. If you know these two musicians, you can imagine the burning heat they produce together. It feels right, it feels inevitable. What follows just gets better.
Sacred Money conjures the dread power and unrelenting pull of money-seduction. Next is a triplet of on-theme cover versions starting with the lead single from the record, a sleazy and sinister cover of the cannonic Oz-boogie-era song, âIâll Be Goneâ (originally by Spectrum 1971). Side two smacks you straight in the face with a blood pumpinâ rendition of Suicideâs âFast Money Musicâ followed by a deep cut from The Kinks underrated 1974 concept record Preservtion Act 2 : âMoney Talksâ. The record closes with the title track âSacred Moneyâ a tripped out ode to/ lament for/ rail against, you guessed it⊠money.
Strap in for a one of a kind modern classic of uncompromising punk vision calling for action while demonstrating the heart and the power of community and creativity. Rise up, rob a bank and pull out those leathers, this oneâs two punch banger.
Sacred Money
Off the back of his 2024 EBM meets rockabilly greaser album Moto Zone. Cong Josie returns with a new partner in crime : the legendary Garry Gray, aka Garry Sacred of seminal Aussie swamp-rock outfit Sacred Cowboys. The two met in early 2025 when Cong fessed up to ripping off the Cowboysâ track âNothing Grows in Texasâ on â1300 Scorpioâ, the two recognise a kindred spirit, bonded over their love for Alan Vega and 70âs oz-boogie and next thing you know, weâve got this scorchinâ EP.
The record kicks off with a re-recording mash-up of the aforementioned â1300 Scorpioâ & âNothing Grows in Texasâ in â1300 Texicoâ. Like leather clad twins mysteriously separated by a decade or two, there is an undeniable synchronicity at play. If you know these two musicians, you can imagine the burning heat they produce together. It feels right, it feels inevitable. What follows just gets better.
Sacred Money conjures the dread power and unrelenting pull of money-seduction. Next is a triplet of on-theme cover versions starting with the lead single from the record, a sleazy and sinister cover of the cannonic Oz-boogie-era song, âIâll Be Goneâ (originally by Spectrum 1971). Side two smacks you straight in the face with a blood pumpinâ rendition of Suicideâs âFast Money Musicâ followed by a deep cut from The Kinks underrated 1974 concept record Preservtion Act 2 : âMoney Talksâ. The record closes with the title track âSacred Moneyâ a tripped out ode to/ lament for/ rail against, you guessed it⊠money.
Strap in for a one of a kind modern classic of uncompromising punk vision calling for action while demonstrating the heart and the power of community and creativity. Rise up, rob a bank and pull out those leathers, this oneâs two punch banger.
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Off the back of his 2024 EBM meets rockabilly greaser album Moto Zone. Cong Josie returns with a new partner in crime : the legendary Garry Gray, aka Garry Sacred of seminal Aussie swamp-rock outfit Sacred Cowboys. The two met in early 2025 when Cong fessed up to ripping off the Cowboysâ track âNothing Grows in Texasâ on â1300 Scorpioâ, the two recognise a kindred spirit, bonded over their love for Alan Vega and 70âs oz-boogie and next thing you know, weâve got this scorchinâ EP.
The record kicks off with a re-recording mash-up of the aforementioned â1300 Scorpioâ & âNothing Grows in Texasâ in â1300 Texicoâ. Like leather clad twins mysteriously separated by a decade or two, there is an undeniable synchronicity at play. If you know these two musicians, you can imagine the burning heat they produce together. It feels right, it feels inevitable. What follows just gets better.
Sacred Money conjures the dread power and unrelenting pull of money-seduction. Next is a triplet of on-theme cover versions starting with the lead single from the record, a sleazy and sinister cover of the cannonic Oz-boogie-era song, âIâll Be Goneâ (originally by Spectrum 1971). Side two smacks you straight in the face with a blood pumpinâ rendition of Suicideâs âFast Money Musicâ followed by a deep cut from The Kinks underrated 1974 concept record Preservtion Act 2 : âMoney Talksâ. The record closes with the title track âSacred Moneyâ a tripped out ode to/ lament for/ rail against, you guessed it⊠money.
Strap in for a one of a kind modern classic of uncompromising punk vision calling for action while demonstrating the heart and the power of community and creativity. Rise up, rob a bank and pull out those leathers, this oneâs two punch banger.











