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Shame are streaming their Live In The Flesh concert film

Shame are streaming their Live In The Flesh concert film Shame are streaming their Live In The Flesh concert film 19 April, 2021 “The hits are heavy, the misses are frequent, and the screenplay is near perfection,” Shame said of their concert film. Shame have made Live In The Flesh available to stream digitally ahead of its vinyl release on June 12th for Record Store Day. Before the socially distanced tour of the UK which starts next month, this appearance at the Brixton Electric has been the main live duty for the band around their second studio album Drunk Tank Pink. “The dichotomy of pleasing/provoking audiences who are here for one thing and might not much enjoy the other is dealt with typical honesty by Shame on opener Alphabet, Steen spitting out, ‘Don’t forget your P’s and Q’s/Please smile when we tell you to’, over screaming, stressed guitars,” our review reads.

Working Men s Club - X | Track Of The Week

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Shame Charlie Steen Drunk Tank Pink Interview

Drunk Tank Pink, all about isolation and internal conflict. And then COVID happened. Charlie Steen remembers it well. He and his bandmates were in the luxe surroundings of La Frette Studios, a 19th Century mansion-turned-recording facility outside of Paris, ten days into recording their second album, alongside prolific producer James Ford (Arctic Monkeys, Simian Mobile Disco). “I remember [guitarist] Sean [Coyle-Smith] looking at the news on his phone,” Steen recalls. “It was talking about this coronavirus in China. And we didn’t really even think about it at the time.” Like everyone else, Shame had to grapple with plans upended and an uncertain future. Once restrictions lifted, they created a string of imaginative music videos, released monthly throughout autumn; showcased many of the new songs in a live performance shot at London’s Brixton Electric; and played a secret, socially-distanced gig to support their home base, Brixton’s The Windmill.

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