For Fans Of: Sleater-Kinney, Black Sabbath, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Queens of the Stone Age and Black Angels
Purchase the album via iTunes HERE
DAYTON, OH // March 11, 2016: Kicking off their single “The Fire Walk” via Substream Magazine (HERE), “Girl” via Under The Gun Review (HERE) and a pre-release album stream hosted exclusively on Absolute Punk (HERE), the grunge pop sister trio GOOD ENGLISH have really built up some serious hype for their album release. The highly anticipated self-titled full length from GOOD ENGLISH is finally available!
Stream GOOD ENGLISH’s album below:
The album was created in roughly two months as a compilation of songs written over the course of two years. After the release of their first full-length album, Radio Wires, the sound of their music changed dramatically. Frontwoman, Elizabeth Rasmussen, elaborates, “Upon the realization that guitar and bass pedals are really, really cool and that distortion and heavy riffs are audience captivating, we immediately began writing new material and playing it live; however, we still had hundreds of Radio Wires CDs to sell so we weren’t in any rush to put out a new album. For about a year we played sets that were half-old material and half-new material. We slowly began playing sets that were comprised entirely of new material, but still only had Radio Wires as an audio representation of us. In January of 2015 we recorded demos of five new songs that we self released simply to have as a current representation of the Good English sound.”
The new tunes are a mix of punk, pop, classic, and grunge rock. “We’ve been told by many people that we are the genre of music that should have come post 90’s rock,” adds Rasmussen. Many of the songs include heavily distorted guitars and bass, riffs on riffs on riffs, and catchy melodies that end up being almost a juxtaposition of the music. Growing up in Dayton, Ohio was a huge influence on many of the songs, because of the grunge, metal, lo-fi, and punk history of the Dayton music scene. Rasmussen says, “To be taken seriously by Dayton music enthusiasts we had to have a heavier sound, and that ultimately gave us a unique sound for three tiny white girls from the suburbs. For the first time we began writing songs together as a band and really worked with one another to help create the best possible part for each instrument. Although we individually wrote the parts for our respective instruments, we allowed each other to have a say. Basically, we got all up in each other’s business, like sisters tend to do.”
In August 2015 Good English recorded three new tracks with Micah Carli at Popside Studios in Troy, Ohio, with the intention of having them mixed and mastered to take on tour and sell. Thinking they would maybe release them as singles or as an EP, while in Nashville, the band was introduced to Andrija Tokicand his studio, The Bomb Shelter. “We fell in love with the fully analog studio and decided to pencil in a date to record a few songs there. Once again we decided that we might record a few songs and release another EP or a 7”, but weren’t entirely sure. Upon returning from tour we knew that we desperately needed to record all of the songs we had been playing live and ultimately decided it was time to release a new full-length album.” Good English recorded three songs with Tokic in December, and then recorded the remaining five with Carli in early January. Kevin Antreassian of Backroom Studios in Rockaway, New Jersey mastered each of the songs to ensure a cohesion, a tall task, given that eight of the eleven songs were recorded digitally and three were recorded in an analog studio. Yes Master Studios mastered the album as a whole. Also of note, Mathew Franklin of Cadaver Dogs and The Skulx helped produce seven of the songs recorded at Popside Recording, and threw on some of his signature guitar licks, and Alex Nauth ofFoxy Shazam and The Skulx played trumpet on “Line of Fire,” the final track on the album.
Because of the sporadic nature of how the album was recorded and planned, it is less of a meticulously thought out album from front to back, and more of a compilation of the past two years of writing and an introduction to a new era of Good English.
In support of the new album, Good English will be heading out for an expansive national tour. The tour includes a stop in Austin, Texas for South By Southwest to play a few showcases, particularly two Behind the Curtains Media / SwitchBitch Records / Rocker Stalker dates on March 17 and 18, more info on which can be found HERE. In addition, they will be releasing frequent music videos, working on new material, booking further regional tours, and keeping their creative juices flowing and fans happy!
Biography: Good English is a three-sister rock band based out of Dayton, Ohio that has built its unique sound on a bedrock of grunge, garage-pop, and punk-influenced rock and roll. The sisters, Elizabeth, Celia, and Leslie Rasmussen, have been playing out together in bars, taverns, theaters, galleries, and festivals since they were in junior high and high school, performing original music and entrancing audiences along the way. With vocal and instrumental comparisons spanning an enormous spectrum… part Nancy Sinatra, part Karen O, part Sleater-Kinney part Black Sabbath, the dark rich vibe the band is channeling is a haunting and engaging revitalization of post nineties rock and roll.
A Word from the Press:
“Dressed in all black, Good English were hell on heels until the last note of their set… These three are the real deal, and if they keep heading down this path then a bright future awaits.” – The Fire Note
“This three-sister garage pop band won me over with a raucous set of ear candy at this year’s Nelsonville Music Festival, but they already had a fan checking out their set from backstage in Wayne Coyne of the Flaming Lips. Singerguitarist (and big sister) Liz Rasmussen’s vocals range from honeysweet to a raging yawp, and the rhythm section of Celia and Leslie Rasmussen lays the foundation for songs that stick in your head like bubblegum to your shoe.” – Columbus Alive
The sisterly trio of Elizabeth, Celia, and Leslie Rasmussen – aka Good English – is on their way to becoming the hardest rocking band of sisters since Heart or The Breeders. With scorching guitar licks and a driving pulse, this Dayton, Ohio-based band creates a wall of sound that is ferocious and focused. They have been performing together for years, as their tight sound attests. – The Revue
“Dayton band Good English adds a unique wrinkle to the typical Gem City brothers in arms story brothers in arms, in fact, would be incorrect in this instance, given that the core of Good English is a family of sisters.” – The Dayton City Paper
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