The Moog - Sold For Tomorrowhttp://www.notlame.com/CDMOOG1.htmlThe Moog - Sold For TomorrowThe Moog - Sold For TomorrowKids these days. God bless `em! These 20-somethings are hip, ultra-cool and....listen to all the right bands. For The Moog, we`re talking The Only Ones, Buzzcocks and, on the more modern side, Jet. They`re Hungarian, too! The Moog takes their inspiration from sixties rock `n` roll bands (The Beatles, Beach Boys, Kinks, Sonics) and late seventies punk (Ramones, Blondie), as well as an assorted variety of rock groups (Nirvana, Muse, Blur, Libertines). "I Like You"-the album`s first single-recalls the classic pop feel of early Lennon-McCartney songwriting with an innocent-yet-direct pop style, while "Survive" brings to mind The Passenger-era Iggy Pop with its hypnotic melody and clipped guitar chords. The Moog is causing big waves on MySpace, where the band enjoys much adulation from their ever-growing number of fans in both Europe and the US. Sold for Tomorrow is the first musical statement from this young Hungarian rock band, and its music promises it won`t be their last. Producer Jack Endino was brought in, so it has bite and clarity w/ the sounds as his work is consistently solid and a great match for a band like The Moog. <p> "Grade: B+. Dude, Hungary rocks! The Moog started out in the relatively cloistered Rock scene of Budapest as Nirvana/Led Zep-obsessed teens (the band`s bassist couldn`t play an instrument but was so inspired by their music that he learned in order to be involved) and eventually found each other to fulfill their destiny as the first Hungarian Rock band to sign with a U.S. label for their jumpily joyful debut, Sold for Tomorrow. Rightly so, as the quintet incorporates the hyper-caffeinated pulse of The Strokes, the gritty urban Punk bounce of The Libertines, the Garage-stained verve of Hot Hot Heat and charming dashes of `60s melodic Pop naiveté and `70s Punk/New Wave determination. The beauty of The Moog`s debut is that the band`s exuberance leaps out of the speakers and dances around the room on every track, from the rafter-rattling "Your Sweet Neck" and the breakneck carnival Punk of "I Don`t Want You Now" to the Beatles-flecked simplicity of "I Like You," the Brian Wilson roaring quietude of "Anyone" and the New Wave/Space Rock throb of the album`s seven-minute closer, "Xanax Youth." The Moog delivers their goods on Sold For Tomorrow without a lot of self-conscious influence peddling, just plenty of good old-fashioned Rock & Roll passion and unbridled energy." - Brian Baker, City Pages. <p> <a href="http://audio.notlame.com/sounds07/cdmoog104.mp3"><img src="http://www.notlame.com/images/ear.jpg" width="20" border=0 alt="power pop, independent music"></a> <a href="http://audio.notlame.com/sounds07/cdmoog104.mp3">I Like You </a> - mp3<p> <a href="http://audio.notlame.com/sounds07/cdmoog101.mp3"><img src="http://www.notlame.com/images/ear.jpg" width="20" border=0 alt="power pop, independent music"></a> <a href="http://audio.notlame.com/sounds07/cdmoog101.mp3">Your Sweet Neck</a> - mp3<p> <a href="http://audio.notlame.com/sounds07/cdmoog109.mp3"><img src="http://www.notlame.com/images/ear.jpg" width="20" border=0 alt="power pop, independent music"></a> <a href="http://audio.notlame.com/sounds07/cdmoog109.mp3">Goodbye </a> - mp3<p> <a href="http://audio.notlame.com/sounds07/cdmoog105.mp3"><img src="http://www.notlame.com/images/ear.jpg" width="20" border=0 alt="power pop, independent music"></a> <a href="http://audio.notlame.com/sounds07/cdmoog105.mp3">Never Hide </a> - mp3<p> <a href="http://audio.notlame.com/sounds07/cdmoog102.mp3"><img src="http://www.notlame.com/images/ear.jpg" width="20" border=0 alt="power pop, independent music"></a> <a href="http://audio.notlame.com/sounds07/cdmoog102.mp3">Everybody Wants </a> - mp3http://www.notlame.com/The_Moog/Page_1/CDMOOG1.html