From San Francisco, Thee Oh Sees is bombarding the world with their ferocious garage rock. The fact that the group constantly changes line-up does not seem to be a real objection. Just like the like-minded , the musical course has been mapped out long and broad, but fortunately, Thee Oh Sees, like The Fall, always manages to surprise. On their eleventh album A Wierd Exits, they immediately overwhelm
… the listener in the opening track. The rousing Dead Man's Gun thunders like a train from the speakers. In the krautrock-like Jammed Entrance synthesizers grunt while in Plastic Plant the classic rock of and resonates. Thee Oh Sees does not write songs. They prefer jams and search for the best groove in every song. They do this with bluff and bravado, as befits a good rock band. Anyone who enjoyed previous releases by these troublemakers will not be disappointed by the music on A Weird Exits. (PdK)more