Flasher Document the “Paranoia-Fueled Auto Erotic American Psyche” In New Single – AdHoc

Flasher Document the “Paranoia-Fueled Auto Erotic American Psyche” In New Single

The DC-based band’s “Winnie” craft lyrics from the world around them.

 

There’s a venerable tradition of documenting a day in song—but what if this process could be automated? How can you document a moment or day in a way that is smoothed out of the messiness of personal experience? DC punks and Priests affiliates Flasher offer such an attempt on “Winnie,” the A-side to their upcoming 7”. “Winnie” recalls a motel breakfast in Winnie, Texas last May, intercutting verbatim quotations from news coverage of the Egypt Air Flight 804 with pharmaceutical advertisements heard on the TV that day. It’s a song that luxuriates in the weird, improbable sentiments created by juxtaposing the two source texts, and their uncanny effectiveness as pop lyrics—“these feet want to keep the beat moving,” taken from a diabetes medication commercial, is just one of many ear wormy hooks the track features. The track itself is riff-fueled post-punk joyride, sounding like something off an early Mission of Burma single; off-kilter but enthused with a deft pop sensibility. Flasher describe the track as a “bricolage tribute to the paranoia-fueled auto erotic American psyche,” but the song works just as well as a catchy-as-hell rave up.

Listen to the track below. “Winnie b/w “Burn Blue” is due out May 5 via Sister Polygon. The band will be on tour throughout the Spring, and will perform at AdHoc’s SXSW day party in Austin at Cheer Up Charlie’s on March 15.

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