• logo

Mekons - Honky Tonkin' (1987)

Mekons - Honky Tonkin' (1987)

BAND/ARTIST: Mekons

  • Title: Honky Tonkin'
  • Year Of Release: 1987
  • Label: Quarterstick Records
  • Genre: Post-Punk, Alt Rock, Alt-Country
  • Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
  • Total Time: 57:13
  • Total Size: 143/445 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

1. I Can't Find My Money 2:34
2. Hole in the Ground 4:07
3. Sleepless Nights 3:36
4. Keep on Hoppin' 2:38
5. Charlie Cake Park 4:12
6. If They Hang You 3:18
7. The Prince of Darkness 3:49
8. Kidnapped 3:23
9. Sympathy for the Mekons 3:53
10. Spit 2:54
11. Trimdon Grange Explosion 6:48
12. Please Don't Let Me Love You 2:43
13. Gin Palace 3:52
14. Sin City 3:38
15. Danton 2:44
16. Prince of Darkness 3:04

The third album from what could be called the Mekons' "soused socialist hillbilly-punks from Leeds" period, 1987's Honky Tonkin' built on the country-influenced musical and lyrical themes of Fear and Whiskey and The Edge of the World, where the boozy ambience of classic Nashville sounds found a sympathetic ear among this pack of political and emotional underdogs. As a set of songs, Honky Tonkin' isn't quite up to the standards of the previous two albums, which creatively kick started the band after a period of inactivity, but as an album Honky Tonkin' is one of the band's best efforts. Touring and frequent visits to the recording studio had tightened up the Mekons' sound a bit ("tight" being a highly relative concept), and while it's many miles away from slick, the more full-bodied engineering and production on Honky Tonkin' was a decided improvement on the often hollow and slapdash recording of Fear and Whiskey. And given a sympathetic recording environment for a change, the Mekons truly delivered the goods; the rollicking sway of "Kidnapped" and "Keep Hoppin'" finds room for a boozy joy in an unfriendly world, while the bitterness and defeat of "Spit" and "I Can't Find My Money" put a sympathetic human face on this band's class-conscious rage. And while this album didn't contain the Mekons' first stab at the 19th century protest song "The Trimdon Grange Explosion," this version was a remarkable meeting of folk-rock's earnestness and punk's spitting wrath which ranks with the group's most powerful recorded moments. Just short of a masterpiece, and one of the high points of the Mekons' twangy period.



As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
  • Unlimited high speed downloads
  • Download directly without waiting time
  • Unlimited parallel downloads
  • Support for download accelerators
  • No advertising
  • Resume broken downloads
  • User offline
  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 18:46
    • Like
    • 0
Many thanks
  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 03:39
    • Like
    • 0
Many thanks for Flac.