Penny Black Music - Magazine Reviews - 31st Jan 2005
My Deaf Audio have strong roots in musical history. The Brighton-based four
piece recall Link Wray with their raw, earthy garage sound, and, then to move
on a decade, the Who with their epic, thunderous intensity. They are reminiscent
of the Clash also with their boys' gang mentality, and, to go further towards
the present still, acts such as the Godfathers and Rocket from the Crypt with
their blistering punchiness. Yet far from being simply a rehash of some of the
best elements of all their favourite bands of the last fifty years, My Deaf
Audio also carry much of their own both with their dance punk beats and singer
Andy Reed's scorched vocals, which sound like he has fuelled them by gargling
with petrol.
'Get Out, Right Now', an ode to both touring and Saturday night hedonism, gets
their new four song EP, 'My Deaf Audio...are the New Black', off to a fine start
with its klaxoning guitars, sledgehammer drums and swaggering tune.
The band maintain a similar breathless pace with the middle tracks, 'Turn Off
the World', a bolshy lambast against mediocre radio, and the brooding, rumbling
'Connection', which is about a failure to communicate and love having gone messily
askew.
The EP closes magnificently with the crackling fire and brimstone electricity
of 'We're Convicted.' Reed and company have been through what sounds like a
night in Hell, but as he bellows out the chorus, "Holding On/holding on
for the day to come" one inherently knows that he and his band who have
been through various record company changes and creative crises in the years
since they formed in 2001 will defiantly battle through.
This is an excellent start to the year for My Deaf Audio who have the possible
commercial potential to make many critics and fans end of the year polls.