– Limited edition cloudy pink vinyl (edition of 300 units)
***PLEASE NOTE THIS IS A PRE-ORDER ITEM. OFFICIAL RELEASE DATE IS JULY 5 2024. PRE-ORDERS ARE EXPECTED TO SHIP OUT MID TO LATE JUNE.
***PLEASE NOTE THE IMAGE IS AN APPROXIMATION OF THE FINAL RECORD AND THE ACTUAL COLORING MAY VARY
Includes digital pre-order of Self Deprecation At Hourly Rates [LP].
You get 1 track now
(streaming via the free Bandcamp app
and also available as a high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more), plus the
complete album the moment it’s released.
shipping out on or around July 5, 2024
edition of 300
Purchasable with gift card
€18.99EURor more
Compact Disc (CD) + Digital Album
– Digipack CD
***PLEASE NOTE THIS IS A PRE-ORDER ITEM. OFFICIAL RELEASE DATE IS JULY 5 2024. PRE-ORDERS ARE EXPECTED TO SHIP OUT MID TO LATE JUNE.
**PLEASE NOTE THE IMAGE IS AN APPROXIMATION OF THE FINAL RECORD AND THE ACTUAL COLORING MAY VARY.
Includes digital pre-order of Self Deprecation At Hourly Rates [LP].
You get 1 track now
(streaming via the free Bandcamp app
and also available as a high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more), plus the
complete album the moment it’s released.
shipping out on or around July 5, 2024
Purchasable with gift card
€9.99EURor more
Streaming + Download
Pre-order of Self Deprecation At Hourly Rates [LP]. You get 1 track now (streaming via the free Bandcamp app and also available as a high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more), plus the complete album the moment it’s released.
So far, all indications are that Tristen Colby’s Rhinestone Pickup Truck only travels at full throttle. Since the Asheville, North Carolina native launched the project in 2020, he’s emulated his heroes in Guided by Voices by firing out music at a breakneck pace, with three records, two EPs and two live releases already in the rear view mirror. Now, he’s back with what is, at once, his mot re-fined and riotous release to date: Self Deprecation At Hourly Rates.
Those familiar with his work to date, whether it be the raw power of debut LP Sobbing in the Moshpit or the rapid-fire experimentation of 2021’s Sad Planet, will know that is stage name is apt, not only because it evokes the image of hurtling down a freeway blasting Colby’s college rock influences out of the speakers, but also because the design of such a vehicle would repre-sent a neat frame of reference for his sound; he takes the scuzz and the grunge of classic garage rock and studs it with sharp hooks, nagging melodies and, often, disarmingly personal lyrics.
“In the beginning, it was power pop, really distorted and buzzed out,” says Colby of the project’s origins, which were born out of lockdown when his old band, The Styrofoam Turtles, were forced off of the road. “I was madly in love with Guided by Voices, basically; that lo-fi recording has such charm for me.” A lot of his early tracks, he says, were cut on the fly; “just sit down and record. Some of them, I’ve never played a second time. Quick little ideas, released at random.” The eventual next move for Rhinestone Pickup Truck, then, was always going to be a move towards a fuller, richer sound, and on Self-Deprecation At Hourly Rates, he’s broadened his horizons be-yond the bedroom recording project it started out as, which he described as “very stoned out and caveman.”
Collaborating closely with producer Matthew Sykes, and bringing in Evan Rice to lay down most of the album’s bass, Colby was able to work through ideas more deliberately, throwing ideas back and forth and seeing what stuck. The result is a record that that comes with both polish and crunch, on which the freewheeling pace of the songs works in tandem with the tightness of the melodies, and that channels the spirit of masters of this genre both classic and contempo-rary. Colby nods directly to Nirvana’s ‘Lounge Act’ on the track ‘Knife’, and their influence, along with that of the likes of Dinosaur Jr. and Weezer, are felt throughout.
So too, though, are newer bands; the power pop strut of cuts like ‘Cap’n Ginyu' and ‘Sinking’ bring to mind Bass Drum of Death and Ty Segall, while there was fresh inspiration from closer to home, too. “I definitely drew a lot of influence from JEFF the Brotherhood. (Frontman) Jake Orrall worked on the record, he mixed it, and he’s my childhood hero, really. So, I wanted to rip them off a good bit! Just in my own, unique fashion. I was looking to make something that sounded like my teen years, but matured.”
And there is maturity on Self Deprecation At Hourly Rates; as the title might suggest, there’s in-trospection beneath the rambunctiousness, as Colby sought to work through personal difficulties on the album. “I was writing out of necessity, as part of a healing process,” he explains. “I’d been through a pretty traumatic breakup, and whenever that happens, you always question, what did I do wrong? Where did it go wrong? So, it’s a breakup record, with me taking a look at who I am, and trying to make myself a better person. There’s a lot of loss running through the songs.”
Colby will take the Truck on the road in 2024, with several full band tours in the pipeline, something he jokes he’s looking forward to “after so many years of being destitute.” Self-Deprecation At Hourly Rates will be the fuel in the band’s tank along the way, and looks set to announce Colby as the US’ next great garage rock talent.
credits
releases July 5, 2024
Produced by Matthew Sykes
Mixed by Jake Orrall
Mastered by Luke Reilly
Written by Tristen Colby
Guitars, vocals, bass and drums by Tristen Colby
Bass on track 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 10, 11 by Evan Rice
Art by Tristen Colby
Cover photo by Geddi Monroe
So far, all indications are that Tristen Colby’s Rhinestone Pickup Truck only travels at full throttle. Since the Asheville,
North Carolina native launched the project in 2020, he’s emulated his heroes in Guided by Voices by firing out music at a breakneck pace, with three records, two EPs and two live releases already in the rear view mirror....more
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