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ReleaseProduct
No Rocket Required
Artist
The Moonlandingz
Label
Transgressive
Catalogue Number
TRANS845
Release Date
25 April 2025
  • Vinyl 1×LP

    Vorbestellen $28.99

    SIGNED Transparent Milky Clear

    Weiterlesen

    TRANS845XSM

    All physical purchases of No Rocket Required include free exclusive magnet.

    Voraussichtliches Erscheinungsdatum: 25 April 2025

  • Vinyl 1×LP

    Vorbestellen $32.99

    Indie Exclusive Neon Pink Die-Cut

    Weiterlesen

    TRANS845X

    All physical purchases of No Rocket Required include free exclusive magnet.

    Voraussichtliches Erscheinungsdatum: 25 April 2025

  • CD

    Vorbestellen $12.99

    SIGNED

    Weiterlesen

    TRANS845CDM

    All physical purchases of No Rocket Required include free exclusive magnet.

    Voraussichtliches Erscheinungsdatum: 25 April 2025

The Moonlandingz have returned, seven long years after their debut. When they first emerged from Valhalla Dale they were a semi-fictional band bringing us sticky squelchy pop songs to offer solace and punishment in the months following the Brexit vote and Trump’s first victory. Adrian Flanagan, Dean Honer and Lias Saoudi aka The Moonlandingz conspired with Yoko Ono, Rebecca Taylor, Phil Oakey and the Cowboy from The Village People to make one of the great albums of 2017, and we needed it. Interplanetary Class Classics was a dose of unreality equal to the unhinged times we were stumbling into.

The Moonlandingz have finally returned – not when we wanted them but now that we need them – galloping in on their four horses, bareback and howling, with their eagerly awaited forthcoming album No Rocket Required.

No Rocket Required delivers brassy squawks, motorik convulsions and sinister soothing vocals from a righteous line-up of guest singers and ranters: Nadine Shah, Iggy Pop, Jessica Winter and Ewen Bremner. Plus, of course, there’s The Moonlandingz’ own front man, Johnny Rocket aka Lias Saoudi, who has the wobbly-horny voice of R Whites’ secret lemonade drinker on Give Me More and then becomes basically Kris Kristofferson of the Pennines in the middle of epic Krack Drought Suite, imparting gnomic sawdust saloon wisdom from a barstool in Huddersfield. Mostly though he’s the man we know from Fat White Family with gravelly crooning (to especially great effect in Roustabout, his duet with Nadine Shah) and camp Working Men’s Club lead singer, Syd Minsky-Sargeant.

What to do, as we potter and fret, as we watch bodies, homes and lives destroyed every day while our elected leaders, so forensic and so sensible, use their weasel words, shrug their coward shoulders and saunter off to raise our bus fares. Dancing of course and togetherness, looking out for each other, and that’s not enough. What kind of fight are we bringing? We will always need to organise, to fight, to collaborate, to connect and to dance dance dance. And that is what The Moonlandingz do.

Digitale Titelliste

  1. 1 Some People's Music 3:23
  2. 2 The Sign of A Man 3:13
  3. 3 Roustabout 4:13
  4. 4 The Insects Have Been Shat On 4:36
  5. 5 It's Where I'm From 3:19
  6. 6 All Out Of Pop 2:49
  7. 7 Yama Yama 2:53
  8. 8 Give Me More 2:58
  9. 9 Stink Foot 3:08
  10. 10 The Krack Drought Suite (Pts 1-3) 9:40

The Moonlandingz

The Moonlandingz

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