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The Decibels - When Red Lights Flash (2023) Hi-Res

The Decibels - When Red Lights Flash (2023) Hi-Res

BAND/ARTIST: The Decibels

  • Title: When Red Lights Flash
  • Year Of Release: 2023
  • Label: Lucky Shot Records
  • Genre: Power Pop, Garage Rock, Mod, New Wave
  • Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-192kHz
  • Total Time: 31:06
  • Total Size: 73 / 224 Mb / 1.10 Gb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Why Bother With Us? (2:33)
02. Enough (3:38)
03. There's Just Something About You (2:12)
04. Walk Away (2:46)
05. In Remembrance (2:20)
06. He Thinks He's Right (But He's Wrong) (2:10)
07. Today Is Your Day (2:15)
08. Say Goodbye (2:42)
09. You Don't Need To Be Afraid (1:55)
10. World Goes Round (3:05)
11. Looking Back (2:31)
12. This Might Be The End (2:59)

So where were we? Oh right, Sacramento’s reliable hook-meisters The Decibels were in the middle of recording a follow up to 2019’s smash LP Scene, Not Herd when a world-stopping pandemic hit, effectively pausing the tape machine. All was not lost however. Band member Brent Seaver did shift into solo gear, putting out a fabulous record entitled BS Stands For … But now the band have completed their interrupted sessions and the result – When Red Lights Flash – is everything you’ve been waiting for. Great songs, fab guitar tones, killer playing. Stylistically, it draws from both 1960s and 1980s poppy rock traditions. “Why Bother With Us” breaks things open with a skipping-in-the-sunshine bit of jangly guitar that seems to cross The Monkees with REM. “Enough” definitely revs the 1980s poprock engine a la the Paul Collins Beat. “There’s Just Something About You” has the happy-go-lucky early 1960s American pop sound, but with a bit more muscle. “Walk Away” vibes a crisp 1979 new wave sound while “In Remembrance” has a melodic arc that is reminiscent of an early 1960s song-writing style, but updated. And so goes the rest of the album, merrily shifting decades without ever seeming to jolt the listener. I love the almost early Go Go’s punky ferocity on “He Thinks He’s Right (But He’s Wrong),” particularly the sizzling lead guitar break, the Romantics-worthy chord changes and handclaps defining “We Don’t Need to Be Afraid,” and the Marshall Crenshaw-like “World Goes Around.” Should-be hit single? I vote for “Looking Back.” I could totally hear The Smithereens covering this. If you’re looking for an album that hits the rock and roll melody pedal and never lets up, pick up a copy of When Red Lights Flash – it’s absolute listening pleasure.




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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 17:04
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Many thanks for Flac & 24-192!!