Sleaford mods download ar
Key Markets. To play the media you will need to either update your browser to a recent version or update your Flash plugin. Jolly Fucker Remastered. Tied Up in Nottz Remastered. Tweet Tweet Tweet Remastered. As Williamson found his voice and felt newly liberated from rock music, there followed four Sleaford Mods albums, pressed up piecemeal, before Williamson resolved to up the ante and recruited Fearn after hearing him play at a Nottingham bar called the Chameleon.
Unwittingly, his new partner had prepared himself for the Sleaford Mods' world by working for four and a half years cold-calling people about gym membership "Mainly calling old people who could barely walk" , and had already seen Williamson in action. They didn't know how to take this shouty man. I just thought it was fucking brilliant. Which brings us, via Wank , Austerity Dogs and this year's acclaimed Divide and Exit , to now. It seems almost comically apt that Williamson works as a benefits adviser for Nottingham city council but he will finally turn professional in October.
Lyrics for new songs are already piling up in an app on his iPhone. With the help of the man who puts out their records — Steve Underwood, who works in Nottingham city centre as a bus driver, and joins us in the cafe and then a nearby pub, along with "Parf" — next year, he and Fearn will tour an array of off-the-tour-circuit towns where they think their music will make perfect sense: among them, Wakefield, Scunthorpe, Hitchin and Ramsgate.
Bizarrely, they already do well in Germany; where, says Fearn, "people go fucking mad". Their regular hotel in Hamburg inspired the priceless opening line of the song Tied Up In Nottz: "The smell of piss is so strong it smells like decent bacon" and Williamson recently made sure a picture of the toilet in question was tweeted.
Toilets and human waste are a common theme in their songs. Why all the scatology? It's just fucking horrible. I mean, mine's disgusting.
It's inspiring: having to go to the toilet and release all of it. You can't connect the two things, can you? John Harris. They may be the gobbiest band in the UK — just ask Miles Kane — but there's a political fury behind their angry missives.
Photograph: David Sillitoe for the Guardian. Appears On. Previous Play Pause Next. Loading: Playback error. Accept Cookies Edit cookies preferences. Cookies Preferences For information about cookies that are required for this website to operate correctly, please read our cookies policy. You can choose to opt out of the following cookies: Analytics Cookies Google Analytics is used to track usage of this website anonymously.
0コメント