together PANGEA

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Sick Shit 03:26 Tools
Badillac 02:27 Tools
Offer 00:00 Tools
River 00:00 Tools
Money on It 00:00 Tools
Friend of Nothing - Acoustic 00:00 Tools
Alive 00:00 Tools
Make Myself True 00:00 Tools
Does He Really Care 00:00 Tools
Depress 00:00 Tools
Cat Man 00:00 Tools
Why 00:00 Tools
Where The Night Ends 00:00 Tools
Better Find Out 00:00 Tools
Too Drunk To Come 00:00 Tools
No Way Out 00:00 Tools
Snakedog 00:00 Tools
Looked In Too 00:00 Tools
Kenmore Ave. 00:00 Tools
Bet You Wish I Would Call 00:00 Tools
My Head Is On Too Tight 00:00 Tools
Blue Mirror 00:00 Tools
If You're Scared 00:00 Tools
Sippy Cup 00:00 Tools
The Cold 00:00 Tools
Rats 00:00 Tools
No Feelin' 00:00 Tools
Awful 00:00 Tools
Friend of Nothing 00:00 Tools
She's A Queen 00:00 Tools
Peach Mirror 00:00 Tools
Hi-Fi Television 00:00 Tools
Gold Moon 00:00 Tools
Is It Real? 00:00 Tools
Bulls and Roosters 00:00 Tools
Alison 00:00 Tools
Stare at the Sun 00:00 Tools
Southern Comfort 00:00 Tools
Dispassionate 00:00 Tools
Summertime 00:00 Tools
Night of the Living Dummy 00:00 Tools
All Creation 00:00 Tools
Never Said I Wanna 00:00 Tools
Make Me Feel Weeeird 00:00 Tools
I Don't Wanna Know You 00:00 Tools
Love & Alcohol 00:00 Tools
Shitty 00:00 Tools
My Head is Sick 00:00 Tools
Me and You 00:00 Tools
Hold My Hand 00:00 Tools
I Ran 00:00 Tools
My Heart 00:00 Tools
Misunderstood 00:00 Tools
Haunted 00:00 Tools
Non Stop Paranoia 00:00 Tools
Praise 00:00 Tools
Los Angles 00:00 Tools
Money on It - Acoustic 00:00 Tools
Gates of Steel 00:00 Tools
Spend the Night 00:00 Tools
Moonlight Lately 00:00 Tools
Is It Real? - Acoustic 00:00 Tools
Plasma 00:00 Tools
My Heart - Acoustic 00:00 Tools
Too Drunk To Cum 00:00 Tools
Killer Dreams 00:00 Tools
Make Me Feel Weird 00:00 Tools
Los Angeles 00:00 Tools
Money On It - Audiotree Live Version 00:00 Tools
Kennmore Ave. - Audiotree Live Version 00:00 Tools
Living Dummy 00:00 Tools
Better Find Out - Audiotree Live Version 00:00 Tools
Blood, Blood, Blood 00:00 Tools
Sick S**t 00:00 Tools
Peach Mirror - Audiotree Live Version 00:00 Tools
I Wrote A Bible 00:00 Tools
Gold Moon - Audiotree Live Version 00:00 Tools
Alison - Audiotree Live Version 00:00 Tools
Straight Dumb 00:00 Tools
Engines 00:00 Tools
Sick Shit (Rollo & Grady Sessions) 00:00 Tools
Rumblin' Sound 00:00 Tools
Jelly Jam 00:00 Tools
Love & Alcohol - Live from Lincoln Hall 00:00 Tools
You Sleep Too Much 00:00 Tools
Flame & Co. 00:00 Tools
Useless 00:00 Tools
Sick of the Waste 00:00 Tools
Gates Of Heaven 00:00 Tools
I Need You (Bonus Track) 00:00 Tools
Seed of Decay 00:00 Tools
Sick Shit - Live from Lincoln Hall 00:00 Tools
Badillac - Live from Lincoln Hall 00:00 Tools
Friend of Nothing (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
drop dead town 00:00 Tools
No Oz 00:00 Tools
Dispassionate - Live from Lincoln Hall 00:00 Tools
Friend of Nothing - Live from Lincoln Hall 00:00 Tools
Badillac (Rollo & Grady Sessions) 00:00 Tools
I Looked In Too 00:00 Tools
CIA 00:00 Tools
River (Rollo & Grady Sessions) 00:00 Tools
My Heart (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
Alive (Rollo & Grady Sessions) 00:00 Tools
Plasma (Out Of Your Mind) 00:00 Tools
Money on It (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
Is It Real? (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
Together Pangea 00:00 Tools
Snake Dog 00:00 Tools
blood blood blood 00:00 Tools
Cat Man (NSFW) 00:00 Tools
Kenmore Ave 00:00 Tools
be my baby (the Ronettes cover) 00:00 Tools
No Feelin 00:00 Tools
golden arches 00:00 Tools
Too Tight 00:00 Tools
I Looked In Too (DEMO FOR EU) 00:00 Tools
Why (Rollo & Grady Sessions) 00:00 Tools
I Need You 00:00 Tools
I Looked In Too (Demo) 00:00 Tools
Oz 00:00 Tools
cat man (live KXLU radio) 00:00 Tools
Dead Flowers (Stones) 00:00 Tools
Kennmore Ave. (Audiotree Live Version) 00:00 Tools
Be My Baby 00:00 Tools
"Offer" Official Music Video 00:00 Tools
Is It Real 00:00 Tools
Sick Shit [Explicit] 00:00 Tools
together PANGEA - Badillac 00:00 Tools
Why (Rollo Grady Sessions) 00:00 Tools
River [Explicit] 00:00 Tools
Badillac (Live From Hype Hotel) 00:00 Tools
Gates of Heaven (The Dad Horse Experience cover) 00:00 Tools
Together Pangea Sick Shit 00:00 Tools
Badillac (Live on Radio K) 00:00 Tools
Money On It (Audiotree Live Version) 00:00 Tools
Badillac | Sofar Los Angeles (#946) 00:00 Tools
Dadcore (feat. Together PANGEA) 00:00 Tools
Plasma (outofyourmind) 00:00 Tools
Out Of Your Mind 00:00 Tools
Alison (Audiotree Live Version) 00:00 Tools
Peach Mirror (Audiotree Live Version) 00:00 Tools
Soldado de Baja Demo 00:00 Tools
dead flowers(Rolling Stones cover) 00:00 Tools
Better Find Out (Audiotree Live Version) 00:00 Tools
Gold Moon (Audiotree Live Version) 00:00 Tools
Badillac (Live from Lincoln Hall) 00:00 Tools
Friend of Nothing (Live from Lincoln Hall) 00:00 Tools
Be My Baby (Cover) 00:00 Tools
Badillac (2014) Full Album 00:00 Tools
breed (Nirvana) 00:00 Tools
Does He Really Care? 00:00 Tools
Gates Of Heaven (The Dad Horse Experience) 00:00 Tools
Badillac (Live From BURGERAMA II) #JAMINTHEVAN 00:00 Tools
Love & Alcohol (Live from Lincoln Hall) 00:00 Tools
Kennmore Ave. 00:00 Tools
Badillac (Live at New Parish Oakland, CA) 00:00 Tools
Dispassionate (Live from Lincoln Hall) 00:00 Tools
Too Drunk To Cum (Rollo & Grady Sessions) 00:00 Tools
Your Game 00:00 Tools
Sick 00:00 Tools
Gates of Heaven (Cover) 00:00 Tools
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William Keegan: guitar, vocals * Danny Bengston: bass * Erik Jimenez: drums together PANGEA do rock ‘n’ roll as it was meant to be – raw, unpredictable, and probably dangerous, but also blazing with intelligence, emotion, and edgy experimentation. The Los Angeles-based trio made their bones as purveyors of post-millennial punk, but with their third full-length release – and Harvest Records debut – BADILLAC, they pay their debt to the supersonic 90s rock that first inspired them. The band has not sacrificed a spurt of precious energy, instead integrating nuance and dynamic momentum to songs like “No Way Out” and the undeniably badass title track. The volcanic riffs and massive melodies are matched by an equally provocative lyrical stance, with songs like “Sick Shit” and the album-closing “Where The Night Ends” casting an acerbic eye over the wreckage of the party they helped start – it’s 3am and the drunken fun has given way to sexual panic, anxiety and self-doubt. Slightly stoned but by no means slack, BADILLAC reveals together PANGEA to be both confident and surprisingly committed, their audacious ambition already impossible to contain. “It might be confusing for people, assuming we’re like this garage punk band and then hearing this record,” says singer/songwriter/guitarist William Keegan. “But we really don’t want to get trapped at all.” Keegan first started writing and recording in his Santa Clarita bedroom, his teenage tapes eventually coming to full flower with the aid of bassist Danny Bengston and drummer Erik Jimenez. Known then simply as Pangea, the band played countless beer blasts in and around CalArts, their boozy mayhem and breakneck pop hooks quickly earning them frenzied crowds throughout the Southern California DIY scene and beyond. A string of seven-inches, cassettes, and LPs – including 2011’s ace second album, LIVING DUMMY, released by Burger Records and The Smell’s Olfactory label – followed, as did gigs alongside a veritable who’s-who of like-minded rockers, including Ty Segall, Mikal Cronin, Wavves, and The Black Lips (not to mention 2013’s epic “Burgerama Caravan of Stars” US tour). BADILLAC was recorded with their longtime producer/engineer Andrew Schubert over three intensive sessions at his Tarzana studio, their roster augmented by second guitarist Cory Hanson (of the electronic pop outfit, W-H-I-T-E). While many bands in their position would have simply continued banging out the party punk, together PANGEA decided to throw a curveball at themselves and their fervent fanbase. “We wrote like 30 plus songs for this record,” Bengston says, “half of which have the same punky bubblegum vibe of our last record. Then we had this other batch of songs, a little more melancholy, a little heavier, a little darker. I think in the end we just decided to try to not make the same record twice.” “When I write, there are certain songs that I feel fit the band,” Keegan says, “and then there are songs where it doesn’t feel like they fit. At some point, I was like, maybe we should try some of the songs that don’t necessarily fit. Because I realized that they do fit – they’re just different.” Though Keegan cites such unexpected heroes as Pete Seeger and 21st Century K Records artists like Little Wings and the Microphones, he fully fesses up to BADILLAC’s most primal inspirations. Indeed, songs like “Why” and the cello-laced “No Way Out” fuse classic post punk ambivalence with fist-pumping stadium rock, their neurotic hooks, throat-rending vocals, and fat, distorted riffs hearkening back to the glory days of the alternative nation. “To me, the album is so obviously influenced by the shit that I was listening to when I was 16,” Keegan says. “Growing up in the 90s, all that stuff – Nirvana, Smashing Pumpkins, Weezer. It wasn’t conscious, the album just sounds like that. It feels like that music is etched in deeper that music I’ve listened to as an adult. For whatever reason, the music you listened to when you’re confused and young gets in deeper than anything you might listen to later.” BADILLAC also sees together PANGEA stepping away from their association with a much-hyped scene they believe too often revels in its own idiocy, Keegan’s wry lyrics pushing both their music and subject matter towards unsettling themes of impotence, fear, ennui, and detachment. “We think less and less about how we fit into this garage punk scene that we never even technically felt a part of,” Keegan says. “We just kinda get lumped into that. I’m not really stoked on what a lot of those bands are saying, there’s a lot of misogyny and stuff I’m not into.” Like any angst-ridden tunesmith worth his salt, Keegan also directs his gaze inwards, coming to turns with his own cynical view of relationships on songs like the mordant “Offer,” their cracked melodies and jaundiced skepticism fueled by his recent romantic struggles. “I went through a really difficult relationship where we were breaking up every three months for four years,” he says. “At the end of it, I was just like, “This is never gonna work.’ It was pretty intense and I think that informs a lot of the songs on the album. “It’s kinda funny,” he adds. “As soon as we finished this record, we broke up for good.” BADILLAC will drive together PANGEA through 2014, their imminent plans essentially consisting of touring until they drop. Nevertheless, the band finds themselves in the unprecedented position of having to ponder the future. “We’ve been discussing where the next record is gonna go,” Bengston says, “we still haven’t put our finger on it yet.” “It’s weird,” Keegan says, “because we never had to have those formal discussions, like, ‘What should the next record sound like?’ It’s always been pretty natural. Hopefully that’s what’ll end up happening again.” November 2013 Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.