Bad To The Bone

M.U.T.T. (ex-members of Culture Abuse) have announced their debut LP titled "Bad To The Bone" set for release on October 14, 2022 via Quiet Panic. The band originally released their debut single, ‘Night Moves' this past summer, offering a perfect blend of melodic punk and pop sensibilities, and the debut LP now follows featuring 9 brand new tracks, picking up with Culture Abuse left off. You can stream two tracks from the new LP below, along with the previously released single 'Night Moves' which will not appear on the debut LP.

"The main lead part in Night Moves came to me when I was washing some pint glasses at the bar one night, went home and recorded that riff,” says John Jr. “Then a couple days later after a particularly dirty day restoring houses, the melody came into my head while i was in the shower. I actually had to have my gf grab my phone and record me humming it so i wouldn’t forget it. We recorded it at Atomic Garden East Studios in Oakland with Jack Shirley. I’ve shown the song to a few friends and I keep getting feedback that it sounds like a lost B-side to Blink’s “Cheshire Cat”, album but with some more grit and dirtiness, which i think is perfect and makes me very happy!"

About Culture Abuse:

From the genre-defining power pop of The Flaming Groovies in the 70s to the breakthrough success of Jawbreaker’s gruff but saccharine melodic punk in the 90s, San Francisco’s longstanding legacy as an invaluable piece of the American underground musical landscape is hard to overstate.

Emerging as worthy torchbearers of that legacy are M.U.T.T. After the premature and fraught implosion of his previous band Culture Abuse, John Jr. was left unsure of how to proceed. Between a fizzling long-distance collaboration and an aborted hardcore project, nothing was quite falling into place. But after sending some home recordings to fellow Culture Abuse alum Matt Walker, the ghost of an idea began to take shape.

At Walker’s behest, Junior booked time at Jack Shirley’s Atomic Garden Studios. In need of extra hands to fill out the lineup of a quickly emerging full-fledged band, Junior reached out to two more former Culture Abuse bandmates, Isa Anderson and Shane Plitt. In short order, a lo-fi bedroom project had morphed into a fully realized group, eager to move on from the shared trauma of their previous band’s dissolution.

They don’t want to reinvent the wheel. They don’t want to change the world. They just want to play good old fashioned rock and roll.