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Premiere: STYMiE Share Title Track From Their Upcoming Album “Toil & Folly”

With “Toil & Folly,” STYMiE injected more than necessary energy and complexity into the post-grunge/punk rock sound, something that most bands lacked during the nineties. While most bands relied upon od mid to half-time, nearly psychedelic, hard rock-inspired songs, STYMiE nurtured quite a characteristic sound that sounds fresh and unique even today, three decades after […]

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Photo courtesy of the band.

With “Toil & Folly,” STYMiE injected more than necessary energy and complexity into the post-grunge/punk rock sound, something that most bands lacked during the nineties. While most bands relied upon od mid to half-time, nearly psychedelic, hard rock-inspired songs, STYMiE nurtured quite a characteristic sound that sounds fresh and unique even today, three decades after the group recorded their unreleased material.

We’re thrilled to premiere a title track from their upcoming album “Toil & Folly,” which is coming out tomorrow via New Rage RecordsYou can pre-order vinyl HERE.

Does anyone really need a primer on the Seattle scene at this point? Once-sleepy backwater, best known as the birthplace of Hendrix and Heart, goes supernova in the early ‘90s, dethroning the King of Pop and giving a handful of longhairs the chance to seriously upgrade the thread count on their flannel outerwear. But for every Nirvana, every Pearl Jam, every Soundgarden and Alice in Chains — hell, for every Tad and Supersuckers — there were countless scene staples that didn’t hit the gold-rush jackpot.

Enter Stymie. This heavy, hook-minded sextet (sometimes comprising three guitars and one bass, sometimes two guitars and two basses) was ubiquitous on bills from ’92-’94. And they were one of the only acts — likely the only one — at home sharing stages with bands as sonically wide-ranging as Buffalo Tom, Sleep, Everclear, Gruntruck, Flop, Treepeople and even the Spaceman himself, Ace Frehley. 

Stymie’s own diverse musical influences — Black Sabbath, Black Flag and Black Francis are all reasonable reference points — allowed them to slot into a variety of bills but made them hard for label suitors to pigeonhole. There were flirtations, but no one put a ring on it, with the band self-releasing a handful of singles and showing up on the occasional compilation, including C/Z’s Teriyaki Asthma Volume IX. Stymie’s brief three-year run ended in late ’94 without acrimony or messy interventions, leaving behind a solid resume and a cache of unreleased material.

Toil & Folly

Now, nearly 30 years after the band’s conscious uncoupling, those tunes are ready to have the basement dust blown off them. The 13 tracks on Toil & Folly were drawn from five sessions and represent the many ways the band could bring the heavy. Largely recorded and mixed by noted Seattle producer Phil Ek (Built to Spill, Truly, Big Business), Toil & Folly is an unearthed gem for flannel-flying Seattle Sound obsessives always digging through crates (or Spotify) for that band they never heard of but can’t wait to tell everyone they discovered. Fans of Treepeople, Buffalo Tom, Screaming Trees, and Seaweed will love Stymie.

Source: thoughtswordsaction.com

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