• Spring Loaded
  • SPLENDOUR XR

.

Frank Carter And The Rattlesnakes

New album
‘STICKY’
to be released
on October 15th

PRE-ORDER / PRE-SAVE HERE

FEATURING THE NEW SINGLE AND TITLE TRACK

LISTEN HERE / WATCH THE LYRIC VIDEO HERE

.

Frank Carter And The Rattlesnakes

Photo – Jenny Brough

.

UK punks Frank Carter and The Rattlesnakes today share their new single ‘Sticky’, which has just received its first play courtesy of Daniel P Carter at BBC Radio 1. Alongside the release the band announce their eagerly anticipated new album, also titled ‘Sticky’, which will be released on October 15th. It builds on the momentum generated by their recent single, ‘My Town’ featuring Joe Talbot of IDLES, which is the biggest of their career to date and was B-listed at BBC Radio 1.

.

.

Punching out of the speakers with a new directness and immediacy, the single ‘Sticky’ provides a flavour of what to expect from the album. It’s a shark-sharp-shock of visceral punk fury, as the snarling soul of Carter’s vehement voice transports us to the sweltering, closing time madness of a city after dark. He paints a scene of growing paranoia, desperately looking to delve into any vice to counteract the existential despair of feeling “midnight blue.” But there’s a sardonic, horrorshow humour at play too as he spits, “I’m no vampire but I want your blood.”

Carter commented, “‘Sticky’ is about that moment where you’re drunk at a bus stop at 3AM. You know there are no more buses, but you sit there anyway because you’re too fucked to figure out your options. Your kebab is on the floor, there’s a Stella in your pocket, and you’re woken up by a dirty little fox eating your shoes.”

It’s the perfect introduction to a record that breaks out of lockdown.  Produced by guitarist Dean Richardson for the first time, it solidifies the pair as one of the most exciting partnerships in British punk rock. Carter sounds like an untamed force of nature, embodying the impish menace of Keith Flint one minute and Sid Vicious the next.  Alongside Richardson, they’ve crafted a record which wastes no time in hitting hard: not a single song hits the four-minute barrier, and few even hit three.

‘Sticky’ is the sonic eruption of a year-plus of suppressed energy. While it’s an escapist experience, recent reality is never too far away. It’s there in ‘Go Get A Tattoo’, which was inspired by Carter’s experience of having to shut his first London based tattoo parlour, Rose of Mercy, almost immediately after it opened.  It’s just as present in ‘My Town’, a suburban vignette of society’s collective mental health quickly unravelling.

Carter and Richardson’s vision is augmented by the mob of underdogs and outsiders who join them.  As well as Joe Talbot, queer underground electro-punk sensation Lynks complements Carter’s attack with a double-dose of surreal savagery on ‘Bang Bang’ and ‘Get A Tattoo’, while Cassyette brings a provocative punch to the sleazy rock ‘n’ roll of ‘Off With His Head’.  By the time Primal Scream’s Bobby Gillespie emerges on the closing ‘Original Sin’, his breathy voice feels like salvation for the transgressions that preceded it.

Carter sums it up succinctly: “Someone described it to me as ‘they felt their youth’ when they were listening to the record. When you make albums, those are the ones you want to make. Nostalgic, but classic. Timeless, and also modern.”

The album is now available to pre-order on a range of exclusive formats here. All pre-orders are rewarded with instant download of the title track and ‘My Town’.

,

‘STICKY’ ALBUM OUT OCTOBER 15th
LISTEN HERE

Frank Carter And The Rattlesnakes

‘Sticky’
Tracklist:

1. ‘Sticky’
2. ‘Cupid’s Arrow’
3. ‘Bang Bang’ (featuring Lynks)
4. ‘Take It To The Brink’
5. ‘My Town’ (featuring Joe Talbot)
6. ‘Go Get A Tattoo’ (featuring Lynks)
7. ‘Off With His Head’ (featuring Cassyette)
8. ‘Cobra Queen’
9. ‘Rat Race’
10. ‘Original Sin’ (featuring Bobby Gillespie)

.

Follow
FRANK CARTER
and the RATTLESNAKES
WebsiteFacebookInstagram

.

AMNPLIFY – DB

CLICK THE PIC TO VIEW THE NEWS

  • I Know Leopard
  • Ed Sheeran
  • Jimmy Barnes