Music
The best kept secret in music
Press
May 27, 2004
If the Rebirth Brass Band came from New York City instead of New Orleans, and if the members had been reared on punk rock instead of jazz, you'd have a group that sounds like Country Club & the Porn Horns.
The Brooklyn band bills itself as "part sleazy power-rock trio, part hard-and-heavy horn section," which aren't necessarily elements that should fit together well. They do, though, on the band's self-released debut, "The Stationwagon Revolution." Country Club is adept at churning out riff-centric, horn-laced rock 'n' roll ("Squeeze It In"), experimental jazz-rock ("Travel") and retro surf rock ("Wishing Well").
- ERIC R. DANTON
Reprinted with permission. - The Hartford Courant
May 15, 2004
"Creating impressive compositions that dance in and out of frame, raging with mood and complex tenacity, [Country Club & the Porn Horns] make for salacious nightclub material...even when you've heard [The Stationwagon Revolution LP] five times, it still stands out."
-Diggs
Reprinted with permission. - Hybrid Magazine
May 27, 2004
If the Rebirth Brass Band came from New York City instead of New Orleans, and if the members had been reared on punk rock instead of jazz, you'd have a group that sounds like Country Club & the Porn Horns.
The Brooklyn band bills itself as "part sleazy power-rock trio, part hard-and-heavy horn section," which aren't necessarily elements that should fit together well. They do, though, on the band's self-released debut, "The Stationwagon Revolution." Country Club is adept at churning out riff-centric, horn-laced rock 'n' roll ("Squeeze It In"), experimental jazz-rock ("Travel") and retro surf rock ("Wishing Well").
- ERIC R. DANTON
Reprinted with permission. - The Hartford Courant
Discography
The Stationwagon Revolution LP (2004)
Stuff to Snack On EP (2003)
Photos
Feeling a bit camera shy
Bio
Part sleazy rock trio, part hard-and-heavy horn section, Country Club & the Porn Horns devastates audiences with raw, original compositions and a frenetic stage presence. The band formed on a hot, hazy day in the summer of 2000 after a brief rendezvous in a Brooklyn junk yard.
The band’s debut LP, The Stationwagon Revolution, is the culmination of years spent writing, performing, and perfecting infectious, high-energy material. From the mayhem of “Squeeze It In,” to the sugary surf rock of “Wishing Well,” to a monstrous reworking of Fear’s cult punk hit “New York’s Alright If You Like Saxophones,” Country Club & the Porn Horns reinvigorates rock with equal doses of wit, showmanship, and ferocity.
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