dinsdag 17 maart 2026

FULL ALBUM PREMIERE - Bad Mothers Union - Sore Losers



FULL ALBUM PREMIERE 

Bad Mothers Union - Sore Losers



We mentioned it on Monday. Stoner HiVe is doing another FULL ALBUM PREMIERE this week! And the time is now! We're honored to present to you the new release by BAD MOTHERS UNION! It's called Sore Losers and was already hinted at during a Quick Fire Friday session hosted by Ronny Dijksterhuis. He mentioned the first two singles and wrote: "March 19th sees the release of Bad Mothers Union's new Album 'Sore Losers'. January delivered the first preview through the twisted and slightly alienating heavy psych song 'God's Intercom'. This month these Irishmen treat us to another tune of the album, a mystical, dragging, dark, drawn-out yet exiting experimental psychedelic trip called 'Cut in Half'. God knows how the other tracks will sound, but I for one am more than eager to find out because both previews are killer."

Well, somewhere between a rehearsal room sweat-fog and a cosmic transmission beamed out of Wefxord, Bad Mothers Union’s Sore Losers detonates like a crate of amps tumbling down a pub cellar staircase. Part of the unruly Irish underground currently kicking up dust in basements across the country, the record rides a lazy motorik pulse into long, hallucinated jams where guitars spiral, drums hammer and feedback blooms like neon moss on damp brick. Think the jagged noise of Sonic Youth colliding with the garage-psych ferocity of Thee Osees after three days without sleep. Five tracks, played loud, loose and gloriously alive. 

And the time truly is now! For right now, you can hear the full album in full force, from the over twenty minutes long opener Jerusalem Jones, sprawling in scope and wonderful in all its meandering psychedelic flow. The one-minute long punk and noisy Bad Mothers Union outcry and battle statement. The two singles and almost eighteen minute long final track Golden O. A tour de force that starts somewhere in a deep cosmic fog, where it slowly drifts forth, like a languid psychic broadcast from the outer edges of a jam heavy galaxy. Fuzz guitars hum, delays scream and a stubborn snare drum keeps the track steady while the music spirals outwards through eastern tinged psychedelic trance infusion before touching down in a rainy back alley cul de sac somewhere in the dubious Murrintown part of Wexford, Ireland... Amazing album! Sore Losers is a winner! 

Sore Losers comes out Camellia Sinensis Records on March 19th, but you can hear it right here, righ now!  

You know what to do, press play below and get lost with Bad Mothers Union!  


 

 PR Wire:

A whirling dervish of unbridled self-expression Bad Mothers Union unleash torrents of euphoric kraut-psych-rock as they reach to the heavens on their new album ‘Sore Losers’. Established in Kilkenny, Ireland by front man Conor Kavanagh, during Bad Mothers Union existence they have focused on forging a community of like-minded individuals, bands and artists with the view that no crowd or venue is too small. Driven by the unshakeable need to share their artistic vision with the world. Eschewing the standard approach to membership the band act as a musical collective, thriving on collaboration and what each player’s voice brings to their sonic tapestry. Building on the success of two highly successful singles ‘God’s Intercom’ and ‘Cut in Half’ which caught the sharpened ears of Hot Press, IMRO, First Music Contact, Pure M Zine, Blowtorch Records, Blackmarket Playlists amongst other, new album ‘Sore Losers’ is a 5 song sonic exploration of the musical relationship between the band members. The blistering results of people, live, in a room playing music together. Speakers pushing air, cymbals crashing and drums exploding as they ring an unbridled expression of themselves from their instruments. Hypnotic, trance inducing rhythms, are juxtaposed against celestial spiralling guitars or swathes of noise and feedback punctuated by samples of mundane everyday life. All at once, the songs are a reflection of the world the band live in and pull the inner world out for all to hear. It feels organic, it feels real, unpretentious, unapologetic and absolutely vital in Ireland’s music scene today.

Eschewing the standard approach to membership the band act as a musical collective, thriving on collaboration and what each player’s voice brings to their sonic tapestry. The current line-up is Conor Kavanagh (vocals/guitar), Shay English (bass), James O’Neill (drums/percussion), Céin O’Dowd (guitar/bouzouki) and Ethan Corcoran (synth/bass/vocals) while Shay English (bass/vocals/guitar), Joel Pitcher (guitar/bass/vocals), Michael Lanigan(guitar/bass/vocals) and Aaron Harbourne(drums/percussion) all contributed to the album alongside Conor Kavanagh. Drawing on influences musical and beyond the band cite Sonic Youth, Thee Osees, Mogwai and Melvins with some David Lynch adding a surrealist twist to the expansiveness of their music.

The album opens with ‘Jerusalem Jones’ and quickly establishes the mood for the album. Clocking in at 20 minutes and change, the band aren’t here to make radio friendly unit shifters or interested in bending to some algorithmic idea of what music should be. The song builds organically as if unfolding before us for the first time. Bass and drums lock in from the start as a hypnotic bass line keeps the track tethered to Earth, while drums give the track its drive, subtle changes in rhythm push parts forward and dictate the flow of energy. This solid foundation gives the guitars the time and space to explore multiple melodic ideas as they build to crescendo and pull back, or double down and ascend to further celestial heights. Music like this is designed to give you space to think, to let your mind wander and conjure up images that accompany the spiraling music. Reminiscent of bands like Earthless or Sleep, there’s a vastness to ‘Jerusalem Jones’ that just isn’t achievable in 4 minutes with a verse, chorus, verse structure.

Second track ‘BMU’ takes a complete 180. It’s all over before it’s began as the track burns past in under a minute a half. Musically, perhaps the only track to ever feature a Gnasher impression, reference Desperate Dan and then descend into noise rock/hardcore. The lyrics are described as the band’s mission statement, repeated until the tracks die into a fury of feedback and chorus pedals. Similar to a long lost Nirvana track you might find on an Outcestide compilation, crafted in some dank Seattle basement before Nevermind hit, unself-conscious and unpretentious.

‘God’s Intercom’ was initially conceived during a jam session, fittingly, in a Methodist Church in Kilkenny. From the outset ‘God’s Intercom’ is explosive, a single chord and a machine gun snare roll are all the introduction given before the band open the gates to the fury within. Aaron's drums propel the track forward, while guitars swirl around each other, untethered like a wild rudderless rocket. We are giving some breathing space as the track drops down enough for Conor to intone ‘It was Christmas Day, pissing rain, Jammy called once again, Were those the days before the crash?’. He says the lyrics are stream of consciousness, borne out of the track evolving over many jams and many live shows, but pull in characters from his youth, coupled with insecurities, and self-doubt mixed with reminiscence about teenage boredom. There’s no ‘verse/chorus/verse’ here as the track naturally ebbs and flows, guitar melodies rise and fall, and unexpected hand claps remind people it’s cool to dance as we build to crescendo and before dropping down to recharge. The track features Peer Pleasure’s Brandon Murphy on vocals during the staccato middle section who’s lines ‘I've been looking at you while you've been laughing at me and I've been laughing at you this whole entire time.’ seem like how the conversation with God might actually go, should he ever answer that intercom. Elsewhere on the track Fiachra Carey plays saxophone, who, when recording his takes decided to dress like a member of ska legends, Madness. Because, of course.

Penultimate track ‘Cut in Half’ explores some of the bands more experimental post punk leanings. When the track was written, Michael Lanigan instructed Aaron to play a simple beat ad infinitum allowing the band to swirl around it. Making full use of the three guitars, as the track progresses they intertwine and melt together, becoming almost impossible to discern who is playing what. String scrapes become an essential part of the language for the track, creating tension as the band pulse behind. Sounding like signals captured from space, delayed guitars seem in conversation with each other as the two bass lines, act as an anchor and alternately adding to the chaos. During the recording, Shay, suffering from a bout of illness and without realizing the tape was rolling, in his frustration took to smashing his bass off the floor, creating an accidental new layer of noise for track. This unadulterated approach to song writing and recording is central to Bad Mothers Union, moving at the speed of inspiration the band aren’t hindered by more traditional ‘rock & pop’ approaches.

Closing out the album is ‘Golden O’, which acts almost as a sister song to ‘Jerusalem Jones’, two sides of the same coin. Originally conceived as an intro to another song, with the main riff played backwards, it outlasted it’s original home and grew into something of its own. Unhurried in allowing the music to find its way, there’s a heavy pschy influence here with more than an air of eastern mysticism. The track pulls you into it’s deep hypnosis, as the ever morphing guitars guide you through the trance. Small, subtle changes grow and build into new ideas that blossom into another and into another. There are any number of sounds that rise up and fall away, delays that sound like signals screaming to Earth from space, fuzz guitars that whirr away under the track, the ever-present snare drum keeping you from losing yourself to the viscous atmosphere. The track ends with an acoustic guitar and the final haunting tones that bring us back down to earth.

‘Sore Losers’ is representative of Bad Mothers Union as a musical entity, in that, it is an unrelating infinite spiralling force of energy. Unperturbed by what the outside world may think. This is music that needs to be created, that could not be kept inside and speaks to both worldly and celestial forces. Bad Mothers Union create moments of transcendence, sounds to get lost in, a blissful euphoria all concocted by a voice, drums, bass, guitar and some ska saxophone. A band that remains true to themselves and in that create their own gravitational pull. ‘Sore Losers’ feels like only a glimpse into the wider world of Bad Mothers Union.

 

Tour Dates: 

March 20th / Album Release Show / The Green Door, New Ross w/ Scalder & Redder Herring 

March 21st / The Watchtower, Drogheda / headline w/ Relics & Amadán

April 3rd / The Dock, Carrick on Shannon w/ Mark + Luke 

April 10th / Lost Lane, Dublin / supporting Unsane

April 18th / Hackett’s, Kilkenny / support from Star Comedy Democrats, Reckless Tony & Amateur Pharmacy

April 23rd / Fred Zeppelins, Cork / supporting Tide7 w/ Rafters

May 6th / Fibber Magees, Dublin / supporting Goblinz w/ The Romboids

July 25th / Volume Records & Books, Dun Laoghaire w/ Slouch

August 7th / Bennigans, Derry w/ Deoch

August 8th / Ryan’s, Kilkenny w/ Oracle Villa

August 21st / The Ol’ 55, Galway

 

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