cloudspeakers - 22.12.2010  Yes, the ramshackle clatter of previous albums from this Portland trio has been replaced by a more considered approach that highlights Kathy Foster’s ...
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Bernhard Bessing - 27.11.2010  Until (fairly) recently Seattle trio The Thermals were on the city’s legendary Subpop label. In Fuckin’ A they made one of the 00s most exciting seari...
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Matthias Scherer - 23.11.2010  The logical story of the new Thermals album would be: The band have “grown up”, shifted their focus from themes like death and religion to love, and a...
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Alex Deller - 09.11.2010 It's amazing, really, how the Thermals have managed to pick apart a series of vast and complicated themes – religion, death and now, with their fifth ...
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Noel F Gardner - 05.11.2010  Portland-based indie loyalists The Thermals don’t sport their ideologies on their sleeves, exactly, but may have worn them as temporary tattoos in the...
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Thom Gibbs - 03.11.2010  Evolution is a painfully slow process, only noticeable under close examination. Charles Darwin was slightly more interested in fossils than bands, but...
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Tom Edwards - 29.10.2010  What made early The Thermals records such good fun was the way the Portland trio hurtled through their songs, racing themselves to the finish as if th...
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Tom Hughes - 28.10.2010  Over four fine albums, Portland's whipsmart pop-punks have tackled religion, politics, family and other high concepts; their fifth is all about love, ...
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PJ Meiklem - 26.10.2010  With their tinny, post-punk guitars and fragmented lyrical critiques of bible-belt America, Oregon three-piece The Thermals openly acknowledge their i...
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Chris Morgan - 01.10.2010 Buy at iTunesMy knowledge of the Thermals is, admittedly, rudimentary, selecting them for review on the basis of their kind-of-recognizable name alone...
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