Formed in the wake of his more volatile commitments, Thee Oh Sees started as an extension of John Dwyer's softer side. Their early recordings were somber and beautiful. In 2008 the band made an unexpected turn, delivering their wildest, weirdest, hardest-rocking record yet with The Master's Bedroom Is Worth Spending A Night In. In 2009 they followed it with an even wilder, more hard-rocking record, Help. Recorded by Chris Woodhouse (the A-Frames, Mayyors), Help draws straight, dark lines to both the British psychedelic rock of bands like The Creation and the caveman thud of The Troggs while a Cramps-like appreciation for rockabilly lies not far below. The album weaves Dwyer's signature AM radio howl with the catchiest of driving tunes, Brigid Dawson's gorgeous harmonies, heightened fidelity, thick spring-reverbed bombast, mighty drums, and an undeniable pull. The result is a sound somewhere beyond nostalgia, beyond the garage, beyond the fireside song and supposed goo-rock.
- Enemy Destruct
- Ruby Go Home
- Meat Step Lively
- A Flag In The Court
- The Turn Around
- Can You See?
- Rainbow
- Go Meet The Seed
- I Can't Get No
- Soda St. #1
- Destroyed Fortress Reappears
- Peanut Butter Oven