Sarandon's Age Of Reason
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Release Date:
March 29th, 2011

Sarandon return to the fray with nothing other than a concept album.

Flying the flag for Prog Rock?

Maybe.

Still annoyed by Twee Pop?

Definitely.

Sarandon’s “Age Of Reason” tells the story of Big Trev, a man frustrated with his lot and determined to change his life.

The album is narrated by The Shend (The Cravats, The Very Things) who plays the voice of the story’s hero.

Musically Sarandon have moved their sound forward – Produced once again by the inimitable Anthony Chapman (Collapsed Lung, Bis, Klaxxons, Ten Benson), the sound is a more mature take on the angular agit-pop of their previous outings. The cheese-wire treble of the guitars remains, the bass thuds and booms and the drums clatter at light speed, but the songs contained in Sarandon’s Age Of Reason are more carefully crafted and arranged.

There are songs to make you shout and songs to make you sing.

There are even songs to make you dance.

Sarandon are back with a vengeance.

Back to rescue you all from the mundanity of modern la-la-love-you indie pop.

Other guests on the album include Robert Lloyd (The Nightingales) and Rhodri Marsden (Scritti Politti).

Sarandon are currently:

Crayola (Colgates, Future Sperm Brasil): Guitar & Voice

Alan Brown (bIG fLAME, The Great Leap Forward): Bass & Voice

Tom Greenhalgh (World Sanguine Report): Drums & Voice

What people have said about Sarandon:

"An undeniable low-key genius." - the wire

"This is articulate, quintessentially British pop." - plan b

"you'll notice it because it's short but you'll remember it because it's blistering." - maps magazine

"Sarandon are awesome, like Big Flame fronted by Billy Childish." - go magazine

"Eternally recording the perfect John Peel Session" - guided missile

"Your songs kill me" - Kramer | Shimmydisc

"Sarandon make Futureheads sound like a marketing exercise for the new Kate Bush LP." - TrakMarx

"The most spastic pop I've heard in a while." - indiepages.com

"Catchy as the flu, incredibly listenable and very, very short." - The Fly

"Sarandon songs consist only of the ‘good bits'." - unpeeled

"Pretty much essential." – unpopular