THE DIRTY HEARTS

The Dirty Hearts


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The Dirty Hearts

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THE DIRTY HEARTS  self titled, self released full length is available on line via the links above.  Look for their 2008 release "Pigs" on Socyermom Records July 2008. 

 

 

Pigs

Buy

THE DIRTY HEARTS  latest full length effort "Pigs" is available on-line now.  The Dirty Hearts Non-Stop High Energy Garage Rock is heard all over this new album.  "Pigs" ©2008, features 10 tracks including  Record Store, Alone, No Strings Attached and the title track Pigs. 

 

THE DIRTY HEARTS  Bio / News

The creative core of The Dirty Hearts was forged in a Santa Fe, NM recording studio when Frankie Medina, a songwriter who had previously worked with a notable assortment of producers, including Jack Good (the Beatles) and the Kessel Brothers (the Ramones), took time from his own work to produce an album for a young songstress named Calida. Not long after, the couple packed their bags and set off on a journey leading them to a cramped and sweaty garage in Austin, Texas, where in the summer of 2005, the two began cranking out stripped down and honest rock & roll like their heroes The Pixies, Nirvana, and The Stooges.

After successfully spreading the word with their first cow punk influenced EP, Five Canciones Five Pesos, the band dropped their eponymous debut full-length in 2006. The album was well received by college radio and the music press, with The Austin Chronicle selecting it as one of their favorites of the year.

Following that release, the band had a monumental 2007. The Dirty Hearts toured the Southwest and West Coast, performing a SXSW showcase and a number of live radio spots. The highlight was a hilarious spot on the Andy Dick “Shit Show” where The Dirty Hearts performed a song backed by James Brown’s widow, Tommie Rae.

The same year the band shot a video for their song, “New One,” and the song quickly became a favorite with many radio DJ’s. Notably, the song was played for 14 weeks on Andy Langer’s “Next Big Thing” radio show. The video’s satirical take on the Bush administration also garnered attention in the blogging community.

The band later hunkered down and recorded a new album, Pigs, due to be released July 22, 2008. The creative nucleus remained while new talent was brought in on bass and drums. Still at the helm are Frankie Medina and Calida, with newbies Keith McManus and Walrus filling in the rhythm section.

Pigs features a more focused version of the band careening through hooks and digging deeper than before. “Record Store” kicks off the album in a full-on assault of what Medina says at its beginning initially reminisced a Bo Diddley jam.

The band takes a rest from the fast-paced rock with “Possession Blues,” revealing The Dirty Hearts can slow it on down and bear their dark and vulnerable side while maintaining their punk aesthetic. Not everything went according to plan during the creation of the track though. Things kept glitching out and odd noises filled the room while tracking, according to Medina. The candlelit room and a PJ Harvey soundtrack between tracking most likely was an influence.

The garage rock of The Dirty Hearts carries over to the stage with non-stop high energy. Whether it’s a performance from The Dirty Hearts ending, or Pigs coming to its end, you’ll feel like you just need to smoke a damn cigarette until your next fix.

 

 

THE DIRTY HEARTS  Press

This gritty group has expanded from a duo to a four-piece on this, their second full-length. And the confidence accrued from meshing well with a couple other new pals comes through from the get-go. First there are a few grimy graveyard stomps (were that graveyard the site of a jocks-geeks kegger stand-off). Then they soon move into '95 indie rock ("Cold Feet," "Pigs") abetted by slinky horns or keys; then shift over mostly to a neck-scruff yank on the kind of tried and true, fuzz-filled, Farfisa-fueled, barroom kick of rootsers like Blood On The Wall or the Forty-Fives. Sometimes that neck-yank rips flesh, like on "No Strings Attached" and "Sin Ataduras," streaked with cutting guitar screeches and a Cobain gas-huff huff. Oh, and they speak in Spanish every once in awhile, in case you're the kind that needs multi-cultural accents to verify that it's okay to get up and stomp around the floorboards to "just" very solid rock'n'roll. Considering this is a sophomore slab, and with an EP in there somewhere too, leader Frankie Medina's non-affected vox and the current configuration's general musical musculature makes Pigs feel like the Dirty Hearts are just warming up.

- By Eric Davidson -- CMJ.com

The Dirty Hearts are either good at being bad or bad at being good, but good luck divining a definitive answer from their naughty New Wave. The local quartet's debut strikes such an alluring balance between contentment and catastrophe it's almost impossible not to get swept along, and its breakneck pace renders petty details like who did what to whom almost irrelevant. If you can catch them, there's some salient observations on modern relationships here, accentuated by taunting boy-girl vocals and disguised by sugary hooks that conceal their sharp edges until long after Romeo is bleeding. Try robotic love poem "The Body Song," Spoon-like "Style," and fluid "Take Her All Around" for starters, bearing in mind the Pixies' smirking specter is never very far away. If anything, this baker's dozen guitar-keyboard concoctions is a shade monochromatic, but so were the Thin Man movies, and they've held up just fine.

- The Austin Chronicle



Not to judge an album by its cover, but it's worth mentioning that the picture of Frankie Medina and Calida on the inside of the Dirty Hearts' self-titled debut release is damn sexy, and smacks of more than just a little cheap motel grit. But then that seems to be the line that group is working throughout the album. From the opening riffs on the first track "New One," there's a definite raw surge of energy in the sound that is coupled with a palpable sensuousness. Calida's sultriness mixes in with Medina's blitzkrieg of punched-out verses to keep the song torn with indecision. There's a strutting beat that kicks lyrics like "You look so beautiful / Walkin' down Congress suckin' on a red bull / I see them stop and stare / Everybody wants some, I've already vacationed there" into high gear, and the song ends with the Calida's intentionally perky and cloying call out of "Hey Frankie!" and the singer's dismissive and indifferent response "Oh no, not you again / It's just so boring. / I think I'll just put on / My old shirt."

"New One," especially with its abrupt ending, works perfectly in playing off of the dynamic between the core duo of the group. The songs are at their best when they're exploiting that play between Calida's and Medina's vocals, as in "The Body Song" or "Take Her All Around." But just as "New One" leaves us with the feeling that Frankie is bound to settle once again with the admittedly sexy girl that he nonetheless detests, the album also seems unwilling to commit to either its second-wave punk tendencies or its more mainstream alternative fallout. Not that the result isn't sometimes spot-on perfect (and you can tell the songs must be explosive when performed live), but you get the sense through much of the album's second half that the Dirty Hearts aren't quite willing to make the push in either direction. Like the picture on inside cover, it's seedy and sordid enough to hint at that classic degenerate punk edge, but also doesn't really seem to want to go there.

Despite this somewhat ambivalent pull, most of the tracks still work extremely well between those two veins. In fact, if taken individually, the songs are often exceptional - in no small part due to the group's ability to create some of the most readily addictive choruses around. "Take Her All Around," for example, is the farthest removed from the rest of the album with its more pop-styled sound, but it is also one of the best cuts. And then the group is just as likely throw in garage blasts like "Sinner's Safari," howls reminiscent of the Offspring like on "Play Dead," or synthesized flourishes like "The Body Song." Figuring out exactly where the Dirty Hearts are trying to go is perplexing, and maybe, as with most debut albums, even they aren't exactly sure yet. But it seems that they could easily excel down any path they choose. Of course, they may just as easily determine to keep defying those expectations around every corner, but as a definite band worth keeping an eye on, they could nail something pretty damn spectacular with either a little more dirt or a little more heart.

- The Austinist 

THE DIRTY HEARTS  Shows

BOOKING CONTACT: thedirtyheartsmusic@hotmail.com        For The Dirty Hearts tour schedule -- visit their myspace site