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AU 1008CD
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"The new album from Brooklyn's latest and greatest pop punk sensations overflows with urgent anthems like 'We're Coming Out,' 'Yellow Taxi,' 'Take Me As I Am' and 'BLT,' that will make you dance, drink, fight and make up all at the same time. Is That the Tralala also includes covers of the seminal Wipers tune 'Mystery' and Giorgio Moroder's 'Underdog.' Their 2004 self-titled Audika Records debut took them places they'd never dreamed, sharing stages around the world with bands including Broadcast, The New York Dolls, The Dirtbombs, Ted Leo & the Pharmacists, Holly Golightly, Franz Ferdinand, Camera Obscura, The Magic Numbers, and more. Tralala will hit the road in December and into the New Year bringing their make up or break party into your town, so suit up."
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AU 1006CD
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"Three brand new holiday hits; one sad, 'Christmas Never Comes (When You're Alone),' one sexy, 'Holiday Hearts,' and one drunk on eggnog, 'Everybody Christmas Time.' If we have to get all wound-up, overexcited, tense with anticipation, grossly disappointed and joyful for a month every year, at least we can have some new songs! Despite it all, the holiday season is still a time for joy and sadness and cookies and liquor, all in liberal doses, and the season can still inspire a great pop song. You deserve coal, but you're getting Tralala."
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AU 1004CD
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"The dream started in Brooklyn. The vision was of the ultimate rock &roll band, 4 girls, 3 guys, and 2 chords. Loud, simple and urgent hooks turned into infectious, vibrant anthems, retelling what was already there in the short, sweet language of pop. A Brill Building badly in need of a chimney sweep. The Ramones meets The Shangri-La's? Is Tralala a nod to Hubert Selby's doomed character in Last Exit To Brooklyn? Are they a tribute to the Banana Splits anthem? Could it be Lou Reed's brush-off in Street Hassle? Perhaps. But what is true is that Tralala with their wild, primal pop is now a rock & roll reality with their Audika Records debut."
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