Five Hungry Joes – A pictorial archive of the Trashcan Sinatras. Legendary Scottish Band


Four-Song Miracle
June 15, 2009, 6:00 pm
Filed under: Press | Tags: , , ,

A very long promotional advert for debut single ‘Obscurity Knocks’, which appeared in UK music paper NME.

nme_17039017 March 1990 NME Magazine



Dedication. That’s What You Need
June 3, 2009, 6:21 pm
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Here’s a press cutting from the June 2009 issue of Japanese music magazine ‘Rockin’ On’. It includes a recent interview with the band (mainly Frank via telephone), where new album ‘In The Music’ is discussed.

Translation may follow, if I get clearance – which means my headline doesn’t make much sense. Sorry!

itm_rockinon_inter02itm_rockinon_inter012009 Rockin’ On Magazine June issue (Japan)



Everything’s Gone Red
June 3, 2009, 6:03 pm
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Promotional advert for the release of ‘In The Music’, taken from the June 2009 issue of Japanese music magazine ‘Rockin’ On’.

itm_rockinon_ad2009 Rockin’ On Magazine (Japan)



Keep Rockin’ On
June 3, 2009, 5:59 pm
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Small adverts from Japanese music magazine ‘Rockin’ On’, promoting the release of debut album ‘Cake’.

I don’t really know that much about the magazine – sorry.

cake_rockinonrockinon_cake_ad1990 Rockin On Magazine (Japan)



Sweet Nothings!
May 20, 2009, 6:26 pm
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Here’s a 4-star review from June 1996 in the Tower Records magazine, for ‘A Happy Pocket’.

tower_01

Like Sugar Puffs, the Trash Can Sinatras are honey-coated. Back in the deep and distant past (1989, actually), they released the incontrovertibly sublime ‘Cake’ album, which became a little corner of the music world all its own, filled with jingle jangle melodies so warm and enveloping they protected you like a Ready Brek glow. Further inspection confirmed that singer Frank Reader (brother of Eddi, fact fans) was also a lyricist of ingenious wordplay, laying pun upon pun, betwixt tongue-in-cheek and wry arched-eyebrow. Then they disappeared, briefly re-emerging with their second album, ‘I’ve Seen Everything’, in 1993, before slipping from view once more. Their eternal low-profile is about to take a battering, however, because their third album, ‘A Happy Pocket (Go Discs)****, is a treat. Slimmer and more taut, this is possibly the first time their production hasn’t swamped their seductive sound, but otherwise it’s business as usual. Like the best of Aztec Camera and Orange Juice, there’s unmitigated joy in each of their songs; hazy and summery, gorgeous, coy, and liberally frosted with sugar. A delight.

tower_02June 1996 Tower Records Magazine