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Junkyard

“High Water” is eleven songs-  raucous, blues-based, uncompromising- and marks a triumphant return for Hollywood rockers JUNKYARD on their first official album in 26 years.

While odds and sods have been released over the decades, “High Water” is a firm statement of the band’s 2017, and onward, intent. As singer and founding member David Roach explains, in recent years, JUNKYARD had a blast playing “reunion” shows, which quickly turned into mini-tours through Spain and packed gigs across America. New songs began percolating, and JUNKYARD began writing.

“I had no grand illusions of a magnum opus, or that we’d try and recreate what we were 25 years ago,” Roach states. “This album is not a departure; it’s a rock ‘n’ roll record from JUNKYARD with songs about life, love, regret, addiction and memories.”

JUNKYARD, who hit MTV and radio hard with their self-titled 1989 Geffen Records debut and singles “Hollywood” and “Simple Man”, cement the authenticity their first two records on “High Water”, such blunt songs as the soul-searching of “Cut From The Same Cloth” to “We Fuck Like We Fight” (politely abbreviated as “WFLWF” for the politically correct) going down as easy as an aged Kentucky bourbon.

“The JUNKYARD sound is a pretty classic one: big guitars and drums with David spilling his guts on top,” says Mosher, who produced the album. We wanted ‘High Water’ to sound loose and live, so as far as production goes we weren’t trying to re- invent the wheel, just deliver the songs in the best light we could, then mix in some big riffs and throaty vocals and that’s ‘YARD.”

JUNKYARD’s classic sound got some help from a fan and friend.  Charlie Starr from the band BLACKBERRY SMOKE wrote the dramatic, forthright statement “Till the Wheels Fall Off” specifically for JUNKYARD.

The band — and it’s legion of longtime fans — is excited that “High Water” brings back JUNKYARD as an ongoing concern. As one of the great guttersnipe L.A. bands of the late ’80s — a storied crew that includes Gun’s and Roses, Little Ceasar, The Hangmen — JUNKYARD were proud to be part of “one of the last great rock ‘n’ roll scenes,” as they term it.

“I don’t think we dated ourselves too badly in the beginning so a lot of our songs still have some relevance,” said Roach. “Also, we were in hibernation a while, we weren’t playing while a lot of our contemporaries were. It’s not so much longevity as it was people who missed us 20 years ago finally have a chance to see us.”

Mosher, who was a fan of the group before joining JUNKYARD in 2000, sees all angles of the JUNKYARD saga…

“Although it’s been 17 years since I joined, I’m still ‘the new guy,’ so with ‘High’, I wanted to give the fans something I would’ve wanted as a JUNKYARD fan — a proper third album,” said Mosher. “It was important to all of us that the record be a statement of intent that could connect with fans from back in the day as well as hopefully find new ones for whom this might be their first ‘YARD record. It’s a tall order, but we’re up for it.