
Vintage Crop: Company Man 7" (new)
Vintage Crop are back! The aficionados of awkward rock have taken no annual leave after this yearâs New Age LP, choosing instead to deliver their latest project; a 4-track 7â titled Company Man.
Now firmly in control of their sound, Vintage Crop exhibit their ability to dial up their brash, sarcastic brand of punk as they see fit. Reciting tales of corporate greed, broken promises & unusually long extremities - A 4 track EP that explores life in a suit & tie. Company Man is inundated with the same nervous energy that drove New Age; sharp guitars and unsteady riffs - a claustrophobic space further impinged by the everyday grind.
These four songs are a stand-alone release & will not feature on any future release. Vintage Crop & their associates do not believe in marketing gimmicks.
"Work sucks, right? Right. Just another thing to get through before your day can truly begin. Drudgery, tedium and misery â and for what? Enough money to keep four walls around yourself, with enough left over for records and whatever else you use to take the edge off? Holy shit, the whole systemâs fucked.
Well, hereâs Vintage Crop with an entire EP dedicated to the working week â the Company Man 7" comprises four tracks of rickety, snotty and extremely pointed garage punk that jabs and prods at the whole notion of working for a living, before laughing bitterly in its stupid face and setting it all on fire.
âHow do I contribute when Iâm a subordinateâ and âIâm here for money and pleasureâ are the key lines, illustrating their disdain and existential despair towards the very idea of signing your life away to something as ridiculous as a job. Meanwhile, the band make like Wire, Low Culture and all your favourite mid-fi punk heroes getting antsy-aggro in a queue for the bathroom. Yeah, pretty damn perfect.
Vintage Crop hail from Geelong, Australia, and describe themselves as âa group of people who spent their adolescence playing sport, listening to triple J and shunning the local sceneâ â except now theyâve âsmartened up, changed the channel and stopped exercisingâ. As for me, Iâd describe them as the latest and greatest in an ongoing explosion in ridiculously good Oz-punk, from Royal Headache to the Bed Wettinâ Bad Boys; Amyl And The Sniffers to The Chats, and beyond.
Well, thatâs how Iâd describe âem if I wasnât busy right now. Iâm currently typing up my resignation letter and spray painting pictures of dicks on my bossâ car â records like this make work seem like a waste of time. Letâs all quit together."
Will FitzpatrickÂ
Our take: We last heard from Australiaâs Vintage Crop on last yearâs New Age LP, and if you liked that record Iâm sure youâll be on board with this. Iâm stealing this from labelâs description of the first LP, but if youâre familiar enough with Eddy Current Suppression Ring and Uranium Club to imagine a 50/50 mix of the two bandsâ sounds, youâre probably not far off from Vintage Crop. The back of the jacket says, in a self-aware manner, âCan Vintage Crop be a marketable band in 2019??â Is Vintage Crop hinting that they have bigger ambitions? Are they pledging allegiance to the DIY underground? A little of both? Parquet Courts, who donât sound too far off from Vintage Crop themselves, have blazed a trail for making music that sounds vital and ambitious yet appeals to a wider audience, and I could see Vintage Crop heading down the same path. For now, though, theyâre just a standout punk band with some of the catchiest tracks around. If you like the aforementioned bands, odds are youâll really enjoy both Company Man and the previous LP, so give âem a listen.
Vintage Crop are back! The aficionados of awkward rock have taken no annual leave after this yearâs New Age LP, choosing instead to deliver their latest project; a 4-track 7â titled Company Man.
Now firmly in control of their sound, Vintage Crop exhibit their ability to dial up their brash, sarcastic brand of punk as they see fit. Reciting tales of corporate greed, broken promises & unusually long extremities - A 4 track EP that explores life in a suit & tie. Company Man is inundated with the same nervous energy that drove New Age; sharp guitars and unsteady riffs - a claustrophobic space further impinged by the everyday grind.
These four songs are a stand-alone release & will not feature on any future release. Vintage Crop & their associates do not believe in marketing gimmicks.
"Work sucks, right? Right. Just another thing to get through before your day can truly begin. Drudgery, tedium and misery â and for what? Enough money to keep four walls around yourself, with enough left over for records and whatever else you use to take the edge off? Holy shit, the whole systemâs fucked.
Well, hereâs Vintage Crop with an entire EP dedicated to the working week â the Company Man 7" comprises four tracks of rickety, snotty and extremely pointed garage punk that jabs and prods at the whole notion of working for a living, before laughing bitterly in its stupid face and setting it all on fire.
âHow do I contribute when Iâm a subordinateâ and âIâm here for money and pleasureâ are the key lines, illustrating their disdain and existential despair towards the very idea of signing your life away to something as ridiculous as a job. Meanwhile, the band make like Wire, Low Culture and all your favourite mid-fi punk heroes getting antsy-aggro in a queue for the bathroom. Yeah, pretty damn perfect.
Vintage Crop hail from Geelong, Australia, and describe themselves as âa group of people who spent their adolescence playing sport, listening to triple J and shunning the local sceneâ â except now theyâve âsmartened up, changed the channel and stopped exercisingâ. As for me, Iâd describe them as the latest and greatest in an ongoing explosion in ridiculously good Oz-punk, from Royal Headache to the Bed Wettinâ Bad Boys; Amyl And The Sniffers to The Chats, and beyond.
Well, thatâs how Iâd describe âem if I wasnât busy right now. Iâm currently typing up my resignation letter and spray painting pictures of dicks on my bossâ car â records like this make work seem like a waste of time. Letâs all quit together."
Will FitzpatrickÂ
Our take: We last heard from Australiaâs Vintage Crop on last yearâs New Age LP, and if you liked that record Iâm sure youâll be on board with this. Iâm stealing this from labelâs description of the first LP, but if youâre familiar enough with Eddy Current Suppression Ring and Uranium Club to imagine a 50/50 mix of the two bandsâ sounds, youâre probably not far off from Vintage Crop. The back of the jacket says, in a self-aware manner, âCan Vintage Crop be a marketable band in 2019??â Is Vintage Crop hinting that they have bigger ambitions? Are they pledging allegiance to the DIY underground? A little of both? Parquet Courts, who donât sound too far off from Vintage Crop themselves, have blazed a trail for making music that sounds vital and ambitious yet appeals to a wider audience, and I could see Vintage Crop heading down the same path. For now, though, theyâre just a standout punk band with some of the catchiest tracks around. If you like the aforementioned bands, odds are youâll really enjoy both Company Man and the previous LP, so give âem a listen.
Original: $1,200.00
-70%$1,200.00
$360.00Description
Vintage Crop are back! The aficionados of awkward rock have taken no annual leave after this yearâs New Age LP, choosing instead to deliver their latest project; a 4-track 7â titled Company Man.
Now firmly in control of their sound, Vintage Crop exhibit their ability to dial up their brash, sarcastic brand of punk as they see fit. Reciting tales of corporate greed, broken promises & unusually long extremities - A 4 track EP that explores life in a suit & tie. Company Man is inundated with the same nervous energy that drove New Age; sharp guitars and unsteady riffs - a claustrophobic space further impinged by the everyday grind.
These four songs are a stand-alone release & will not feature on any future release. Vintage Crop & their associates do not believe in marketing gimmicks.
"Work sucks, right? Right. Just another thing to get through before your day can truly begin. Drudgery, tedium and misery â and for what? Enough money to keep four walls around yourself, with enough left over for records and whatever else you use to take the edge off? Holy shit, the whole systemâs fucked.
Well, hereâs Vintage Crop with an entire EP dedicated to the working week â the Company Man 7" comprises four tracks of rickety, snotty and extremely pointed garage punk that jabs and prods at the whole notion of working for a living, before laughing bitterly in its stupid face and setting it all on fire.
âHow do I contribute when Iâm a subordinateâ and âIâm here for money and pleasureâ are the key lines, illustrating their disdain and existential despair towards the very idea of signing your life away to something as ridiculous as a job. Meanwhile, the band make like Wire, Low Culture and all your favourite mid-fi punk heroes getting antsy-aggro in a queue for the bathroom. Yeah, pretty damn perfect.
Vintage Crop hail from Geelong, Australia, and describe themselves as âa group of people who spent their adolescence playing sport, listening to triple J and shunning the local sceneâ â except now theyâve âsmartened up, changed the channel and stopped exercisingâ. As for me, Iâd describe them as the latest and greatest in an ongoing explosion in ridiculously good Oz-punk, from Royal Headache to the Bed Wettinâ Bad Boys; Amyl And The Sniffers to The Chats, and beyond.
Well, thatâs how Iâd describe âem if I wasnât busy right now. Iâm currently typing up my resignation letter and spray painting pictures of dicks on my bossâ car â records like this make work seem like a waste of time. Letâs all quit together."
Will FitzpatrickÂ
Our take: We last heard from Australiaâs Vintage Crop on last yearâs New Age LP, and if you liked that record Iâm sure youâll be on board with this. Iâm stealing this from labelâs description of the first LP, but if youâre familiar enough with Eddy Current Suppression Ring and Uranium Club to imagine a 50/50 mix of the two bandsâ sounds, youâre probably not far off from Vintage Crop. The back of the jacket says, in a self-aware manner, âCan Vintage Crop be a marketable band in 2019??â Is Vintage Crop hinting that they have bigger ambitions? Are they pledging allegiance to the DIY underground? A little of both? Parquet Courts, who donât sound too far off from Vintage Crop themselves, have blazed a trail for making music that sounds vital and ambitious yet appeals to a wider audience, and I could see Vintage Crop heading down the same path. For now, though, theyâre just a standout punk band with some of the catchiest tracks around. If you like the aforementioned bands, odds are youâll really enjoy both Company Man and the previous LP, so give âem a listen.












