Terry Malts
Lost At The Party
Slumberland Recordings
The third album coming from Terry Malts, Lost at the Party is rich, explosive and buoyant that will keep your feet moving. Notable of the Terry Malts sound, his punk backbone is certainly not lost in songs such as βWonβt Come to Find Youβ. Though, on tracks such as βWhen the Nighttime Comesβ, his melodic, loving voice caters to a new variety punks. This time around, lo-fi songs turn into bright and infectious musical recipes. With straight forward drums and a wide variety of guitar – spanning from aggressive pop and gentle rhythms – the music is extremely colourful. Terry Malts makes punk music for the heart and lead singer Phil Bensonβs radiant Brit-like voice is soft, but elegantly intrusive.
The distorted guitars turn in to tender chords, which pave the way for Bensonβs deep voice. The band took a risk by spending more time in the studio, but fortunately their new sound has reemerged the 80βs British punk revolution. The vibe notable of Terry Malts has not been lost, but has been changed from something fearful into something prominently warm. Shades of Joy Division and The Ramones can be heard throughout the record, but Terry Malts offers a new wave of pop-punk. The swinging hooks full of love and lust are a great way to get your hips moving. Terry Malts has achieved niche pop-punk sound, but every song transitions to a different era. On songs such as βItβs Not Meβ, youβre flashed back to the 50βs, boogie-ing with your sweet teenage friends. On βPlaytimeβ, a more modern rock and roll sound is engineered, similar to the sound of NYC legends, Interpol. Lost at the Party is a bubbly, loving album with punk British roots entrenched in every riff, preserved by California punk rockers.
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SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: TERRY MALTS – LOST AT THE PARTY
Josh Carlan