
Tiny Specks In A Huge Abyss
Punk pioneer/Eater main-man, Andy Bladeâs 7th solo album and follow up to 2024âs critically acclaimed and heavily rotated, Sparks bros endorsed Being Alive Is Fun. It is imbued with the usual left-of-centre Blade-ismâs and themes: star maps, UFOâs & a slightly twisted nod to tragic 70âs heroine Karen Carpenter. You get what you deserve with Blade, and with Tiny Specks you are rewarded with a rich code to decipher at your leisure. Most of all, however, it is all about the quality of his songwriting. Opening track âKaren Is The Drummerâ (featuring Bladeâs regular singing collaborator - PseudoPompâs Katerina Sharkova) seems unsettlingly self-explanatory, but all does not seem well in the Carpenter M.O.R world - âItâs just her & her brother & her folks indifference to that girlâ. Occasional Dinosaur Jr vocalist Tiffany Anders gives âIâm Not Myselfâ a poppy but eerie nuance. PollyPikPocketzâs Myura Amara pops up on the short but very sweet âAbout Thatâ. Matilda Scotland, Quick Romanceâs uber-cool punky-chanteuse - adds her Gen Z aura to the summery âI Like It When Youâre Happyâ. Former Generation X guitarist Bob âDerwoodâ Andrews, with whom Blade has worked with consistently of late, once again features heavily on âTiny Specksâ⊠Like with Katerina Sharkovaâs voice, Derwood guitar lines interweave with Bladeâs honeyed vocal as though they made for each other. âThis Placeâ is another key track, capturing the claustrophobic-genocidal mood of what has been taking place in Gaza/Palestine for over two years now, and counting. âThis is not so much a protest song as it is the noise in my headâ. If John Lydon is the Widow Twanky of Punk, and Billy Idol, its Elvis, then Andy Blade must surely be the Sinatra of Punk.
Tiny Specks In A Huge Abyss
Punk pioneer/Eater main-man, Andy Bladeâs 7th solo album and follow up to 2024âs critically acclaimed and heavily rotated, Sparks bros endorsed Being Alive Is Fun. It is imbued with the usual left-of-centre Blade-ismâs and themes: star maps, UFOâs & a slightly twisted nod to tragic 70âs heroine Karen Carpenter. You get what you deserve with Blade, and with Tiny Specks you are rewarded with a rich code to decipher at your leisure. Most of all, however, it is all about the quality of his songwriting. Opening track âKaren Is The Drummerâ (featuring Bladeâs regular singing collaborator - PseudoPompâs Katerina Sharkova) seems unsettlingly self-explanatory, but all does not seem well in the Carpenter M.O.R world - âItâs just her & her brother & her folks indifference to that girlâ. Occasional Dinosaur Jr vocalist Tiffany Anders gives âIâm Not Myselfâ a poppy but eerie nuance. PollyPikPocketzâs Myura Amara pops up on the short but very sweet âAbout Thatâ. Matilda Scotland, Quick Romanceâs uber-cool punky-chanteuse - adds her Gen Z aura to the summery âI Like It When Youâre Happyâ. Former Generation X guitarist Bob âDerwoodâ Andrews, with whom Blade has worked with consistently of late, once again features heavily on âTiny Specksâ⊠Like with Katerina Sharkovaâs voice, Derwood guitar lines interweave with Bladeâs honeyed vocal as though they made for each other. âThis Placeâ is another key track, capturing the claustrophobic-genocidal mood of what has been taking place in Gaza/Palestine for over two years now, and counting. âThis is not so much a protest song as it is the noise in my headâ. If John Lydon is the Widow Twanky of Punk, and Billy Idol, its Elvis, then Andy Blade must surely be the Sinatra of Punk.
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Punk pioneer/Eater main-man, Andy Bladeâs 7th solo album and follow up to 2024âs critically acclaimed and heavily rotated, Sparks bros endorsed Being Alive Is Fun. It is imbued with the usual left-of-centre Blade-ismâs and themes: star maps, UFOâs & a slightly twisted nod to tragic 70âs heroine Karen Carpenter. You get what you deserve with Blade, and with Tiny Specks you are rewarded with a rich code to decipher at your leisure. Most of all, however, it is all about the quality of his songwriting. Opening track âKaren Is The Drummerâ (featuring Bladeâs regular singing collaborator - PseudoPompâs Katerina Sharkova) seems unsettlingly self-explanatory, but all does not seem well in the Carpenter M.O.R world - âItâs just her & her brother & her folks indifference to that girlâ. Occasional Dinosaur Jr vocalist Tiffany Anders gives âIâm Not Myselfâ a poppy but eerie nuance. PollyPikPocketzâs Myura Amara pops up on the short but very sweet âAbout Thatâ. Matilda Scotland, Quick Romanceâs uber-cool punky-chanteuse - adds her Gen Z aura to the summery âI Like It When Youâre Happyâ. Former Generation X guitarist Bob âDerwoodâ Andrews, with whom Blade has worked with consistently of late, once again features heavily on âTiny Specksâ⊠Like with Katerina Sharkovaâs voice, Derwood guitar lines interweave with Bladeâs honeyed vocal as though they made for each other. âThis Placeâ is another key track, capturing the claustrophobic-genocidal mood of what has been taking place in Gaza/Palestine for over two years now, and counting. âThis is not so much a protest song as it is the noise in my headâ. If John Lydon is the Widow Twanky of Punk, and Billy Idol, its Elvis, then Andy Blade must surely be the Sinatra of Punk.











