Three Lobed Recordings
The first ever live album from this fiery Melbourne punk quartet. On this the band run through a raging set to reveal the full extent of their unparalleled live show. The proof is fully on display within the confines of this high energy pudding. A glorious package ready to reward the diehards and make new converts alike."Inflated Bubblegum" pink vinyl.
Tropical Fuck Storm – Inflatable Graveyard [PINK VINYL 2xLP] – New LP
Regular price
$ 35.00
The first ever live album from this fiery Melbourne punk quartet. On this the band run through a raging set to reveal the full extent of their unparalleled live show. The proof is fully on display within the confines of this high energy pudding. A glorious package ready to reward the diehards and make new converts alike."Inflated Bubblegum" pink vinyl.
Australia’s Tropical Fuck Storm, Gareth Liddiard, Fiona Kitschin, Erica Dunn, and Lauren Hammel, cordially welcome you to TFS’ "Inflatable Graveyard", their debut live album. Released via the venerable Three Lobed Recordings, it captures their show at Chicago’s Lincoln Hall, at the peak of their “Fuck the Rain Away” tour. The performance, which spans 11 songs and over an hour of music, contains highlights from their three studio albums (2018’s "A Laughing Death in Meatspace", 2019’s "Braindrops", and 2021’s "Deep States"), accompanied by a pair of covers (“Ann” by the Stooges and “Stayin’ Alive” by the Bee Gees). Consider TFS’ "Inflatable Graveyard" a Greatest Hits album in the purest sense: their eldritch psychedelic ethos trapped on wax, raw and unfiltered.
From TFS’ perspective, “Fuck the Rain Away” was no mere rescheduled trek, but a full-blown revenge tour; the pandemic hit right as they were gearing up to play these very shows, effectively exiling them for the next two years. They bided their time at home—dropping an LP, "Deep States" (plus a handful of EPs and singles); hitting the studio ; and even releasing a feature film, "Goody Goody Gumdrops". Eventually, the world opened up again. And, new material and hand, so the quartet made their move.
The release of TFS’ pent-up creative energy, when combined with the crowd’s fervor and anticipation—they’d been waiting an equally long-ass time, after all—results in an explosive feedback loop unlike anything the band have captured on record thus far. It’s a kind of chemical reaction, a persistent euphoria that starts up the minute they take the stage to “Men’s Only Costume Party”—a bright, somewhat bizarre reggae track one of their friends cooked up in the TFS tour van—and is locked into place thirty seconds or so later, with the scorching opening measures of “Braindrops.” Excitement leads to spontaneity, and before long, fan favorites are assuming remarkable new forms at staggering scale. If you thought the Zappa-esque tantrums on “You Let My Tyres Down” and “Chameleon Paint” sounded unhinged before, wait until you encounter them here; ditto for the subtle dynamic tweaks to “Paradise” and “Antimatter Animals,” all hypnotic effects and rhythmic mind games.
TFS save their best, of course, for the encore: a one-two punch that affirms their status as one of experimental rock’s pre-eminent supergroups, while simultaneously setting the stage for the foursome’s next chapter. Following a soaring, expanded take on ”Two Afternoons,” the band launch into what is perhaps their most ebullient song to date: a cover of Bee Gees’ “Stayin’ Alive,” featuring Dunn on lead vocals, which galvanizes the catharsis of the preceding 10 songs into a hallucinogenic fever dream that’s equally conducive to moshing and making out. In the wake of Kitschin’s successful fight against cancer (a battle that started several months after this recording), that iconic chorus feels not just impactful, but premonitory. Pandemics, illness, a world on fire, political unrest: Tropical Fuck Storm might be temporarily halted now and again, but in the end, their drive makes them unstoppable.
-Zoe Camp, June 2024-
From TFS’ perspective, “Fuck the Rain Away” was no mere rescheduled trek, but a full-blown revenge tour; the pandemic hit right as they were gearing up to play these very shows, effectively exiling them for the next two years. They bided their time at home—dropping an LP, "Deep States" (plus a handful of EPs and singles); hitting the studio ; and even releasing a feature film, "Goody Goody Gumdrops". Eventually, the world opened up again. And, new material and hand, so the quartet made their move.
The release of TFS’ pent-up creative energy, when combined with the crowd’s fervor and anticipation—they’d been waiting an equally long-ass time, after all—results in an explosive feedback loop unlike anything the band have captured on record thus far. It’s a kind of chemical reaction, a persistent euphoria that starts up the minute they take the stage to “Men’s Only Costume Party”—a bright, somewhat bizarre reggae track one of their friends cooked up in the TFS tour van—and is locked into place thirty seconds or so later, with the scorching opening measures of “Braindrops.” Excitement leads to spontaneity, and before long, fan favorites are assuming remarkable new forms at staggering scale. If you thought the Zappa-esque tantrums on “You Let My Tyres Down” and “Chameleon Paint” sounded unhinged before, wait until you encounter them here; ditto for the subtle dynamic tweaks to “Paradise” and “Antimatter Animals,” all hypnotic effects and rhythmic mind games.
TFS save their best, of course, for the encore: a one-two punch that affirms their status as one of experimental rock’s pre-eminent supergroups, while simultaneously setting the stage for the foursome’s next chapter. Following a soaring, expanded take on ”Two Afternoons,” the band launch into what is perhaps their most ebullient song to date: a cover of Bee Gees’ “Stayin’ Alive,” featuring Dunn on lead vocals, which galvanizes the catharsis of the preceding 10 songs into a hallucinogenic fever dream that’s equally conducive to moshing and making out. In the wake of Kitschin’s successful fight against cancer (a battle that started several months after this recording), that iconic chorus feels not just impactful, but premonitory. Pandemics, illness, a world on fire, political unrest: Tropical Fuck Storm might be temporarily halted now and again, but in the end, their drive makes them unstoppable.
-Zoe Camp, June 2024-
released September 27, 2024
Tropical Fuck Storm is Erica Dunn, Lauren Hammel, Fiona Kitschin and Gareth Liddiard.
All songs composed, performed and published by Tropical Fuck storm except for "Ann" (written by D. Alexander, J. Osterberg Jr., R. Asheton & S. Asheton / published by BMG Bumblebee & Warner Tamerlane Pub. Corp.) and "Stayin' Alive" (written by B. Gibb, R. Gibb, M. Gibb / published by Universal Music-Careers o/b/o Universal Music Publ. Mgb Ltd.).
Recorded live at Lincoln Hall, Chicago, IL on 22 October 2022 by Adam Donovan.
Mixed by Gareth Liddiard.
Mastered by Carl Saff.
Art by Ron Liberti.
Layout assistance by D. Norsen.
Tropical Fuck Storm is Erica Dunn, Lauren Hammel, Fiona Kitschin and Gareth Liddiard.
All songs composed, performed and published by Tropical Fuck storm except for "Ann" (written by D. Alexander, J. Osterberg Jr., R. Asheton & S. Asheton / published by BMG Bumblebee & Warner Tamerlane Pub. Corp.) and "Stayin' Alive" (written by B. Gibb, R. Gibb, M. Gibb / published by Universal Music-Careers o/b/o Universal Music Publ. Mgb Ltd.).
Recorded live at Lincoln Hall, Chicago, IL on 22 October 2022 by Adam Donovan.
Mixed by Gareth Liddiard.
Mastered by Carl Saff.
Art by Ron Liberti.
Layout assistance by D. Norsen.