The debut album 'Heartache And Fear' out now - click for more info

AVAILABLE FROM:
ITUNES / SPOTIFY / AMAZON
7DIGITAL / HMV / PLAY.COM
EMUSIC / NAPSTER

'ALBUM OF THE WEEK' Q RADIO 'A SOUND OF EPIC PROPORTIONS' ARTROCKER 'RECENT & DECENT' KERRANG! RADIO 'IMPRESSIVE... HEART ON THE SLEEVE STADIUM BELTERS' DAILY MIRROR 'SEETHING DYNAMICS AND CATHARTIC ANTHEMS' UNCUT

SAVE A LIFE
AVAILABLE FROM:
ITUNES / AMAZON / HMV
7DIGITAL / PLAY.COM / NAPSTER


TTR do Myspace
1/06/11

Today Tape The Radio were featured on the front page of Myspace with a link to Malcolm playing an acoustic version of ‘Our Love Is A Broken Heart’, filmed exclusively for the site.

Click the image to view the video:

Tape the Radio on Myspace

The new Tape The Radio album, Heartache And Fear, featuring the original version of the track can be bought by clicking here

Our debut album is now available in all good record stores, digital and physical.

http://on.fb.me/TTRalbum

Here’s the press release….

Monday 30th May 2011 marked the release of Heartache and Fear, the debut album from London based three-piece Tape The Radio. Produced by Jim Lowe (Stereophonics, Foo Fighters) and mixed by Alan Moulder (Depeche Mode, The Killers, My Bloody Valentine).

Tape The Radio first came into being in March 2008 when Ben Caruso (bass) left his native San Francisco to team up with Canadian,Bryan McLellan (drums) and Londoner Malcolm (Vocals / Guitar).  The last three years have seen the band lovingly craft each track, tending their record and lavishing it with attention.  The album is the band’s longed for child, something that was gestating inside Carson for a decade, something he nurtured through career tumult, failed relationships, lost friendships and something he sheltered despite the vagaries of the music industry. As the name suggests it is the culmination of a lot of ‘Heartache and Fear’.  It is also a glorious and wide screen album; a sum of its parts and very much the product of the years of personal experience that all three members have poured into it.

The album throws its doors open with title track ‘Heartache and Fear’, a rumbling, dark opening statement.  It is chunky and epic yet delicately exposes raw nerves and sensibilities.  An emotional confession of a song, it is both brave and bold; from Carson’s delicate guitar riffs to McLellan’s heavyweight drum rolls.  ‘Shaking Hearts’ is the second song in and from the off it’s clear that Tape The Radio are a band who knows how to write soundscapes.  As the album unfolds it reveals that all of the tracks have huge visual impact.  They are cinematic, they are climatic and they flash hints of a musical lineage that only could have been transcribed by a worldly hand. There are amphetamine-fuelled, caffeine-twitch guitar jerks on current single ‘Save A Life’ (available to buy via the links on this page) and whilst it is a much more to-the-bone kind of track, ‘Save A Life’ demonstrates that thematically Tape The Radio seem to have an incredibly primal sound.  It is earthy and not a little Celtic.  Landscapes flash into the mind’s eye as the record plays; Welsh valleys roll into view, oceans stretch out and rain torrents down – all part of its visual impact.  Not surprising then, when bands such as Echo & The Bunnymen and the Manic Street Preachers were part of Carson’s musical DNA.

These influences flow through tracks such as ‘1989’ and particularly, the upbeat and vital midway point of the album, ‘Horses’.  Venturing once more into darker turf ‘Suffer Me Suffer Me’ is an altogether heavier proposition. Drummer Bryan McLellan sets the tone with an insistent and unquestionable bass drum thudding backbeat and both Ben Caruso’s bass and Carson’s vocal all underline not just the near gothic sensibilities of this track but also Robert Smith’s lipstick traces that are all over it. The ghost of The Cure also lurks around ‘Stay Inside’ – a glorious, skipping, summery, pop song.  The first single from the album was ‘Our Love Is A Broken Heart’.  Released late last year, it also has a huge pop direction and a levity set against a bittersweet lyric. “An anthemic lament which also packs a punch”, said Record of the Day and with early radio play from those other men of exceptional taste Tom Robinson and Steve Lamacq at 6Music, the single and band were beautifully introduced to both the media and listeners alike.

The penultimate missive is ‘The Message’ which is nostalgically wistful and gloriously edgy.  These split level, schizophrenic musical swings between almost pretty pop melodies and darker much more metallic riffery are undoubtedly Tape The Radio’s trademark and something they handle with aplomb. A skill they demonstrate to great effect live.  The depth and dimension is more 3D than their 3 piece combination suggests.  So to the final song of ‘Heartache and Fear’ the debut album by Tape the Radio, simply titled ‘A Desert Track it is a magnificent totem of a song.  It is towering and monumental and stands out against the musical landscape it is sited in.  More than that it is a vital part of the album as a whole, an album which reflects the entire story of Tape The Radio, songs about ambition and loss, ‘Heartache and Fear’.


Artrocker magazine have given us a 4/5 review for our debut album.
You can pre-order the album here: http://bit.ly/TTRheartache

‘Since forming in 2008 Tape The Radio have, according to the press release, spent their time ‘lovingly crafting each track, tending their record and lavishing it with attention’. Hmm. Press releases do talk bollocks sometimes, don’t they?

That aside, ‘Heartache and Fear’ does sound like an album that’s taken a considerable amount of time and effort to get right. One of those albums where you keep going back to the mixing desk, endlessly making changes so minute that only you could possibly notice.

The band’s sound is a form of rock usually found in the eighties; I haven’t seen any of Tape The Radio’s videos, but I’m pretty sure they’ll be playing on a cliff top looking windswept in denim jackets.

Listening to ‘Heartache and Fear’ brought memories of The Cure, The Icicle Works and early U2 flooding back, but there’re traces of White Lies and The Killers here too. The end result of those influences and the band’s attention to detail is an album that has a sense of urgency, especially in the vocals, and a sound of epic proportions. Pretty much any of the ten tracks here could be picked for a single, though my personal highlights are ‘Our Love Is a Broken Heart’ and the adrenaline-pumping self titled opener.’
- Mark Cousens

http://www.artrocker.tv/

PRESENTED BY JAMIE STEPHENS 

Tape The Radio first came into being in March 2008 when Ben Caruso (bass) left his native San Francisco to team up with Canadian, Bryan McLellan (drums) and Londoner Malcolm (Vocals / Guitar). They are cinematic, they are climatic and they flash hints of a musical lineage that only could have been transcribed by a worldly hand. Not surprising then, when bands such as Echo & The Bunnymen and the Manic Street Preachers were part of Carson’s musical DNA with these influences flowing through in the great track ‘1989’ which Malcolm very kindly performed on his tod when he stopped by BTV London.’

Visit http://www.balconytv.com

18/05/11

We’ve just had a new set of press shots taken by Steve Gullick.  Steve’s been a sought after music photographer since the early 90’s having been commissioned by NME, Melody Maker, bands and other music magazines across the world.

He’s famously taken iconic pictures of Nirvana, The Prodigy, Foo Fighters, Nick Cave, Foals, Beady Eye and many more.  You can check out his website and photos by clicking here - http://www.gullickphoto.com

Let us know what you think.

Apologies for the delay guys but here are the randomly chosen 6 winners of a Tape The Radio t-shirt.

Giovanna Costentino

Christina Bass

Lauren Davies

Lizzy Moon-lover Whatmough

Nathan J Measures

Nick Hillard

Send us your t-shirt size (we’ll try our best to make sure everyone gets what they want!) and addresses to info@cyoa.co.uk - Please put ‘TTR Comp’ in the email subject line.

Thanks!