After 35 years in the making, this is The Wreckery album that never was but always should have been!
At the height of the Australian post punk era, Melbourne’s The Wreckery built a loyal audience by playing darkly atmospheric rock with film-noir swagger and true renegade attitude. Their early Rampant Records releases (1985-87) featured the band’s inventive blend of swamp blues, noir-jazz, and deadpan rock (see the Ruling Energy video!) However, creative differences caused the band to disband just as they were hitting their pinnacle with the Laying Down Law album (Citadel Records, 1988).
Now, “Fake is Forever” reignites The Wreckery’s signature sound with an unyielding fervour. Charles Todd’s haunting baritone sax, Hugo Race’s scathing lyrics and mesmerizing vocals, Clayton-Jones’s distorted angular guitars, Robin Casinader’s eclectic multi-instrumental prowess, and the rhythm powerhouse of Nick Barker and former Plays With Marionettes drummer, Frank Trobbiani, collide...
