Wednesday, January 22, 2014

THE DEATH SET Release “Lite The Fuse” Music Video/‘King Babies’ EP Out Now on Dim Mak Records


“...electro-punk assault.”

—Kyle McGovern, SPIN.COM (1/21/14)

“…turn the speakers up and try to break these bad boys...”
NOISEY (VICE) (1/16/14)

The Death Set - "Lite The Fuse" (Official Video)
Link: http://youtu.be/yAYC83GG4rk

Directed by Sofia Szamosi, the "Lite The Fuse" video is the first of two music videos The Death Set are presenting as a diptych, unified by the ridiculous concept of pizza and demonstrating two sides of their extremely individual songwriting and visual style. The first video for "Lite The Fuse" is a brutal, screaming, analogue synth stomper, complete with its sexualized pizza facial and pizza bikini visual stimulation (think pepperoni nipples). The second video for “Soar Away” juxtaposes strangely and equally beautifully a melodic hands-in-the-air punk anthem with its ironic takes on a "girl next door" pizza love story.
 
King Babies—a follow-up to their critically acclaimed album Michel Poiccard (2011)—sees the duo Johnny Siera and Dan Walker along with hard-hitting drummer Will Broussard return to full form. The EP launches with the fast-paced “Lite The Fuse,” a screaming ode to its moombahton-inspired beat that features furious vocals, unnerving punk heaviness, and a grimy bass line. "Think Shank," inspired by ‘80s hardcore, follows suit with electronic builds, back-and-forth vocals, and a half-time bridge that begs listeners to bounce. “Soar Away” shows the melodic side of The Death Set, which includes a pop-leaning chorus of anthemic proportions. The track pays homage to their previous popular tracks like "Negative Thinking" and is a melodic journey about conquering self-doubt. King Babies closes strong with "The Enemy" with electronic blips and a stomping beat behind lyrics that give voice to the madness of internal dialogue.
 
The King Babies EP from The Death Set also celebrates Dim Mak Records 500th release. The EP’s brash mix of cross-genre punk, noise, grunge, and beyond marks a full circle for Dim Mak Records as it perfectly meshes the label’s punk rock roots and current status as a leading brand in contemporary electronic music.

The King Babies EP from The Death Set is available now on Dim Mak Records:
iTunes: http://georiot.co/i500
Beatport: http://btprt.dj/1bO0eBq
Amazon: http://georiot.co/a500
YouTube: http://youtu.be/2MqTzg8PfOQ
Spotify: http://spoti.fi/1jtAvzL
 
About The Death Set:
 
New York City-based The Death Set originally hails from The Gold Coast, Australia. It is there where Johnny Siera, Dan Walker, and Beau Velasco met, drawn together by the local experimental music scene. With stints in Baltimore and Philadelphia prior to relocating to NYC, the band has released numerous EPs and three full-length albums:Worldwide (Counter/Ninja Tune, 2008), Rad Warehouses to Bad Neighborhoods(Counter/Ninja Tune, 2009), and Michel Poiccard (Counter/Ninja Tune, 2011). The Death Set are notorious for their out-of-control live shows and were touted the "#1 Biggest Hope of the Future" by NME.  In 2011 and 2012, The Death Set propelled into the mainstream, earning them the success they had worked and toured so hard for. The Death Set songs have been featured in Google Chrome's commercial including plays during the 2012 Super Bowl; on HBO's 24/7 and How To Make It In America as well asDegrassi Junior High; in films V/H/S and V/HS II; video games NBA 2K12Sunset Overdrive, and Gran Turismo 6; Red Bull's mountain biking video “Red Bull Rampage”; and a remix in a Ministry of Sound compilation. The music video for "They Come to Get Us" won Best Alternative Video at the 2012 U.K. Music Awards. All the while, The Death Set continued to tour hard, playing everything from tiny DIY Parisian art galleries to packed Berlin arenas.
 
For more information on The Death Set, visit:
www.thedeathset.com
www.facebook.com/thedeathset
www.twitter.com/thedeathset
www.youtube.com/TheDeathSetWorldwide
www.soundcloud.com/the-death-set 
www.instagram.com/thedeathset
www.myspace.com/thedeathset

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