£17.99
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A great punk album is one that makes you think, feel and want to mosh simultaneously. Escape From The Zoo has struck the perfect balance between all three on Countinâ Cards. Itâs something that the band â the louder, faster, punk project that Days Nâ Dazeâs Jesse Sendejas cofounded with his wife Veronica â has always done, but never quite to this extent. Much of that is down to the circumstances that led up to the recording of these songs â most obviously a global pandemic, but his period of isolation coincided with Sendejas getting sober, so not only do the songs that make up Countinâ Cards offer up deep and poignant existential questions about life â as well as the social and political constructs that surround and consume it â but theyâre also a reflection of Sendejasâ newfound clarity and the path heâs now trying to take. The result is nine songs that are earnest expressions of everyday struggle and existence. Breakneck and buoyant opener âHeads Up 7 Upâ questions conforming to a life in which youâre meant to spend most of your time working. âShit Showâ â which, along with âJars Oâ Fearsâ, is one of two songs that Lozier mainly wrote and takes lead vocals on â wrestles with thoughts of impending mortality, âSentient Beerâ sees Sendejas question the inspiration and influence, both good and bad that drugs and booze had on him, and âWasted Yearsâ, as the title suggests, is a melancholy but not self-indulgent rumination on days gone by. While much of this may not sound particularly hopeful, what this record does incredibly well is offer a sense of optimistic realism â or, perhaps, realistic optimism â both on a personal level and a more universal one.
For fans of: Days N Daze, Leftover Crack, Bridge City Sinners