Genre: Pop Rock
Label: Smartpunk
Size: 12"
Format: 33RPM,

Share:

Taking Meds Dial M for Meds LP

Taking Meds

$21.99
 
Availability: Discontinued
In Stock An In Stock item is available to ship normally within 24 business hours.
Preorder A Preorder is an item that has not yet been released. Typically the label will set a projected release date (that is subject to change). If a projected release date is known, we will include this in the description in red. Other Preorders are set to release 'TBA.' This means that release date is yet 'To Be Announced'. The Preorder can be released anywhere between weeks, months or years from its initial announcement.
Backordered An Out Of Stock item is an item that we normally have available to ship but we are temporarily out of. We do not have a specific date when it will be coming.
Awaiting Repress Awaiting repress titles are in the process of being repressed by the label. No ETA is available at this time.
Expected On When an item is Out Of Stock and we have an estimated date when our stock should arrive, we list that date on our website in the part's description. It is not guaranteed.
Special Order A Special Order item is an item that we do not stock but can order from the manufacturer. Typical order times are located within the product description.
 
SKU:
SMALP1106
UPC:
762988540861

Coming September 1, 2023 pre-order your copy today! Orders with both pre-order and in stock items will have all in stock items shipped immediately!

2023 Album on Vinyl LP!

"Recorded with producer/engineer Kurt Ballou (The Armed, Joyce Manor, Code Orange), Dial M For Meds finds Sarkis, guitarist Ben Kotin, drummer Noah Linn, and bassist James Palko stuffing every song to the brim with enough earworm melodies to make Bob Mould and Evan Dando proud. The ten tracks are crisp and direct but also pack a punch, and Kotin's inventive leads are sure to intrigue anyone looking for a new guitar hero. And through it all, Sarkis delivers cynical, hilarious, and deeply human commentary on spending your adulthood in a fickle subculture where you're chasing the often intangible high of creative pursuits.

"There's an inherent conflict to being in a band and wanting people to hear your music," Sarkis laughs. "You're doing a thing that probably has some authenticity, that's tied to who you are, that you put a piece of yourself into and you find enriching creatively - but then you're in this field where the fuel is basically the validation, the approval, the desire to get some reaction from other people. It can be a bit of a paradox. It's understandable that people start pandering and lose the plot. Regardless, at the end of the day I think part of being a musician should be writing what you want to hear, and right now I want to hear well-written, catchy rock and roll."

Opener "Memory Lane" makes it clear that Taking Meds have accomplished that goal. The song careens out of the gate with a hook that's stuck in your head by the time the first chorus is over, and laments the pull of nostalgia and the insidious complacency that can come with it. "A lot of the record is about chasing these things that you can't ever really attain, trying to fill a hole that can't be filled," Sarkis says. "I think at one point nostalgia really fueled a lot of my addiction - trying to get back to a feeling that you can't get back to." The album barrels into "Outside," which somehow only gets catchier as Sarkis further explores the emptiness that comes from shallow pursuits, this time through the lens of subcultural minutiae and one-upmanship. "There is human connection that exists beyond 'what's cool,'" he says. "But we expend a lot of effort trying to arrive there. It's a component of subculture that seems much more outsized than it is - as if it's going to satisfy some actual human need."

Sarkis' lyrics are a nuanced balance between cutting humor, pessimistic honesty, and self-aware reflection, always ready with an eviscerating line and even more ready to point out his own participation in the musician cliches he's sending up. It's an ability that's all the more impressive given his knack for fitting these ruminations into instantly hummable melodies, like on the ultra-catchy chorus to "Aftertaste," where he sings about moving his addictive tendencies from drugs to band life. "I can't wait til I get a taste / I can't wait, I'm gonna be the guy that I hate." "I'm not interested in melodrama, I'd rather be laughing," Sarkis explains. "But I'm a 12-step recovery guy, I'm an addict, so a lot of the stuff that's underneath that is emotional problems and I'm just one of those people who combats that with humor. I don't go out of my way to be funny in my lyrics, I think I'm just drawn to absurdity." That farcical element appears often on tracks like "Life Support," "The Other End," or "Something Higher," where Sarkis weaves surreal fantasies or dream sequences in with stark observations about the often mundane indignities of an adult trying to lead a nontraditional life. "I think a lot of artists think they need to have a bleak life," he says. "But it's important to let go of that rigidity."

Dial M For Meds feels like the work of a band that has let go of any preconceived constraints, internal limitations, or external expectations. But Taking Meds haven't stopped stubbornly being themselves - they've just leaned into something that was always there. "Nobody has ever agreed on a classification for our music, so everyone has always just called us a rock band," Sarkis says. "Now they can finally be right."

Features

  • Vinyl LP

Selections

  1. Memory Lane
  2. Outside
  3. Aftertaste
  4. Life Support
  5. Long Tooth
  6. Something Higher
  7. Wading Out
  8. The Other End
  9. Kindness
  10. See the Clowns

Customers Also Like