Secret Machines - Secret Machines (with bonus tracks)
NME.COM feature on Secret Machines - Secret Machines (with bonus tracks) album including album review, artwork, tracks, listen now, tour dates, discography and more.
Album Review
Release date: 12 January 2009
The Secret Machines : Now Here Is Nowhere
Rockers who prove 'prog' is not a dirty word...
Wizened, ageing punks will proclaim their sacrifices were worth it: the spit-covered dancefloors, the chaffing of the metal on bondage pants and irreparable damage caused by using SuperGlue as hair gel was done in a worthy cause: sweeping prog rock from these islands. They might, though, view the rise of The Secret Machines with some concern: although they might claim to be more Can and Neu...
- Jul 19, 2004
Tracklisting click track to read more
- Atomic Heels
- Last Believer, Drop Dead
- Have I Run Out
- Underneath The Concrete
- Now You're Gone
- The Walls Are Starting To Crack
- I Never Thought To Ask
- The Fire Is Waiting
- Daylight, Won't Be Long
- Dreaming Of Dreaming
More Secret Machines Reviews
Secret Machines: Ten Silver Drops
More signs of the prog revival – these Texans are special
- Mar 24, 2006
Secret Machines: The Garage, London, Wednesday, January 18
Texas’ favourite psychedelic sons take a small step towards the big time
- Feb 2, 2006
Secret Machines - Secret Machines (with bonus tracks) YouTube Videos
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Secret Machines News
School Of Seven Bells announce UK and European tour
Former Secret Machines guitarist's band cross the Atlantic next February
Secret Machines - Secret Machines (with bonus tracks): Wikipedia Album Entry
UK special edition includes two bonus tracks, 'Daylight Won't Be Long' and 'Dreaming of Dreaming'. The eponymous third album from Texas space-rockers, The Secret Machines, is their first to feature guitarist Phil Karnats, who replaced founding member Benjamin Curtis in 2007. Received well upon its US release, this record wears its influences on its sleeves, from Stardust-era Bowie to early Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd at their most prog. They take a darker path than on previous albums, the band favouring instrumental passages over pop-fuelled refrains.
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