The Bastards Radical Face

Album info

Album-Release:
2016

HRA-Release:
28.03.2017

Label: Nettwerk Records

Genre: Alternative

Subgenre: Indie Rock

Artist: Radical Face

Album including Album cover

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Formats & Prices

Format Price In Cart Buy
FLAC 44.1 $ 13.50
  • 1 Sisters 03:48
  • 2 Baptisms 02:56
  • 3 Servants and Kings 04:29
  • 4 All Is Well (It's Only Blood) 02:44
  • 5 All Is Well (Goodbye, Goodbye) 04:05
  • 6 Second Family Portrait 04:55
  • 7 Letters Home (Aftermath) 01:17
  • 8 We're on Our Way 04:07
  • 9 West 04:49
  • 10 Small Hands 03:08
  • 11 Nightclothes 06:54
  • Total Runtime 43:12

Info for The Bastards



Radical Face releases The Bastards fan piece in anticipation of the final installment of The Family Tree Trilogy, out early 2016. Includes two previously unreleased tracks. Historically The Bastards have been given away to fans in front of each album to elicit excitement for the impending album release. With that in mind, two new 'Bastards' from the recording of the third installment have been combined with the previous 'Bastards to comprise one complete, stand-alone album.



Ben Cooper
is a teller of stories, as seen with the fanciful album trilogy he launched in 2011, The Family Tree: The Roots, a chronicle revolving around a fictitious 19th-century family (the Northcotes) whose protagonists, unwittingly or not, chart a course for future generations. The second installment of the series, The Family Tree: The Branches, was released in 2013. The project embodies Radical Face’s fascination with big story arcs, history and genealogy — the characters in his sometimes-dark tales are drawn from research, personal experience and his own imagination.

Cooper’s own story could be the stuff of legend itself. As a teenager in Jacksonville, Fla., he had his heart set on being a professional skateboarder, but a serious back injury scotched that. He had played in rock bands but largely disdained band politics, so, inspired by books such as “East of Eden,” “One Hundred Years of Solitude” and the works of authors such as Cormac McCarthy, he embarked on writing a novel. He lost his entire manuscript in a computer crash. “So I decided to try it in record form,” he says. Radical Face’s penchant for otherworldly narratives was revealed on his 2007 release Ghost, a concept album based on the notion that houses retain memories of what transpired inside them. The song “Welcome Home” from Ghost, has garnered over 22 million YouTube views, mostly in part to a worldwide Nikon commercial (ex North America). Further television support has come from shows like Private Practice, Skins, Eddie Izzard, Weeds, as well as his late night national TV debut on Last Call With Carson Daly.

This album contains no booklet.

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