Free Shipping On Purchases Over $75 (US Only)
Over 30,000 LPs IN STOCK
We Ship Worldwide!

Language

Currency

Your cart

Your cart is empty

Check out these collections

Boy & Bear- Suck On Light

SKU: 602577935046
Regular price L£1,997,000.00
Unit price
per
Boy & Bear- Suck On Light
Boy & Bear- Suck On Light

Vinyl LP pressing. Produced by the band and Collin Dupuis (Lana Del Rey, The Black Keys) in Nashville's Southern Ground studios, and mixed in part by Grammy Award-winning mix engineer Tom Elmhirst (Arcade Fire, Beck, Lorde, Amy Winehouse), Boy & Bear's fourth album Suck On Light serves as their first new music since 2015's Limit Of Love and is comprised of 12 tracks including the recently released "Hold Your Nerve" and "Work Of Art." To protect the purity of their musical vision, the band wrote a brief for the album; a clear memorandum of exactly how they wanted it to sound, and how they would achieve it. "We still wanted '70s tones, '70s drum tones and guitar tones, we still wanted to embrace harmonies, but we wanted to push it more into the 21st Century and mess with it a little bit, more than we had in the past," says vocalist-guitarist Dave Hosking.

Format: New Vinyl/Rock

Boy & Bear- Suck On Light

SKU: 602577935046
Regular price L£1,997,000.00
Unit price
per

Release Date: 9.27.19

 
Shipping calculated at checkout.

> Due to the current limited nature of music titles, ALL CD & Vinyl purchases are limited to three copies per customer, per item. If you place multiple orders for multiples the same title, your subsequent orders will be cancelled.

Vinyl LP pressing. Produced by the band and Collin Dupuis (Lana Del Rey, The Black Keys) in Nashville's Southern Ground studios, and mixed in part by Grammy Award-winning mix engineer Tom Elmhirst (Arcade Fire, Beck, Lorde, Amy Winehouse), Boy & Bear's fourth album Suck On Light serves as their first new music since 2015's Limit Of Love and is comprised of 12 tracks including the recently released "Hold Your Nerve" and "Work Of Art." To protect the purity of their musical vision, the band wrote a brief for the album; a clear memorandum of exactly how they wanted it to sound, and how they would achieve it. "We still wanted '70s tones, '70s drum tones and guitar tones, we still wanted to embrace harmonies, but we wanted to push it more into the 21st Century and mess with it a little bit, more than we had in the past," says vocalist-guitarist Dave Hosking.