Southern California Punk Legends TSOL cover Amerie’s “1 Thing” and launch pre sale of the 12” single on Limited Edition Colored Vinyl via Hardline Entertainment.
The vinyl will be available in transparent red, white or blue and will have a black and white silk screened American flag on the reverse side. This is limited to 150 units of each color. Records ship late March.
“I like go-go music and soul and anything that really moves. I first heard Amerie’s “1 Thing” in 2005, when it was released. Fucking infectious man, the way that groove keeps rolling, and she’s such a great vocalist. The lyrics were your basic relationship trip but then it hit me, this isn’t just a song about some dude, these lyrics read like a song to a system or a government that’d been up to no good. When she sang, “memories keep ringing bells” I was thinking of the state of our union today, the turmoil in our society, and where we’d been before—I was musing on our involvement in the Middle East, Latin America, Vietnam. I was thinking about the dirty deeds that this nation had been up to and then she sang, “why don’t you just admit it” and I realized that no one in power, not in this country, was ever gonna admit that we were wrong.”
Southern California Punk Legends TSOL cover Amerie’s “1 Thing” and launch pre sale of the 12” single on Limited Edition Colored Vinyl via Hardline Entertainment.
The vinyl will be available in transparent red, white or blue and will have a black and white silk screened American flag on the reverse side. This is limited to 150 units of each color. Records ship late March.
“I like go-go music and soul and anything that really moves. I first heard Amerie’s “1 Thing” in 2005, when it was released. Fucking infectious man, the way that groove keeps rolling, and she’s such a great vocalist. The lyrics were your basic relationship trip but then it hit me, this isn’t just a song about some dude, these lyrics read like a song to a system or a government that’d been up to no good. When she sang, “memories keep ringing bells” I was thinking of the state of our union today, the turmoil in our society, and where we’d been before—I was musing on our involvement in the Middle East, Latin America, Vietnam. I was thinking about the dirty deeds that this nation had been up to and then she sang, “why don’t you just admit it” and I realized that no one in power, not in this country, was ever gonna admit that we were wrong.”