Guerilla Toss - What Would The Odd Do?
Guerilla Toss - What Would The Odd Do?
42 in stock
Guerilla Toss returns to NNA Tapes with a brand new EP, 'What Would The Odd Do?', an exploration into new territories and an expansion on their recipe for twisted, addictive rock & roll mania: fried funk, damaged dance, and cosmic cacophony. Fans of 70’s prog and rock greats like King Crimson and Todd Rundgren as well as modern torchbearers like Sheer Mag and Deerhoof will be joyfully united by GT's uniquely familiar world of wonder and excitement.
For Kassie Carlson -- singer, songwriter, and bandleader of Guerilla Toss -- What Would The Odd Do? is unarguably the group's most personal release in their impressive history as a music-making collective. After open-heart surgery in 2017 to remove a dangerous blood clot caused by a severe opiate addiction, Carlson has found a new joy in life. She has since cleaned up for good, moved to Upstate New York with her partner and Guerilla Toss drummer, Peter Negroponte, and has never felt more inspired.
Kassie Carlson is a true poet of punk, the voice of an unheard generation, the leader of The Odd. Few people have been through what she has, and making it out alive is just the beginning. With her band of musical misfits, Guerilla Toss is an unstoppable force of nature. Like all great and challenging art, their message is abstract, yet decipherable. And once the listener cracks the code, they’ll be immersed in a uniquely familiar world of wonder and excitement. What will unite us more than to celebrate the absurd and question what we’ve been told is obvious? Let GT be just one of the many songs among the soundtrack of existential infinity and divine recovery.
A portion of the proceeds from the album will go to the Harlem Harm Reduction Clinic, in an attempt to further our reach in the opiate crisis battle.
PRAISE FOR 'WHAT WOULD THE ODD DO?':
"Rumbles like a basement anthem for the forgotten, spinning and sparkling on a steady pulse."
- Stereogum ("Plants," 5 Best Songs of the Week)
"A soaring disco expanse that feels like being trapped inside your own mind."
- Under The Radar ("Plants," 9 Best Songs of the Week)
"A pristine glimpse into existential thought that’s propped up by its energetic instrumentation. It’s also incredibly fun."
- Paste ("Future Doesn't Know," Daily Dose)
"Kassie and company throw every lysergic soaked element and ingredient into a fusion brew of funk, throwback boom-bap beats and delivery that ultimately sends the being of the experiencer outward to a new galaxy and state of existence."
- Week in Pop (Feature + Interview)