Overview:
Here’s to the Devil is the raucous debut full-length from Portland’s Bridge City Sinners, an unholy marriage of folk punk, Appalachian murder ballads, and dark cabaret. Equal parts whiskey-soaked celebration and backwoods exorcism, this album takes traditional string band instrumentation and runs it through a haunted carnival of sin and salvation.
Highlights:
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The title track “Here’s to the Devil” is a barnstorming anthem that invites Lucifer to the hoedown and makes damn sure he brings moonshine.
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“Witches’ Wrath” delivers a fiery feminist hex through clawhammer banjo and firebrand vocals.
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“Laugh While You Can” dances on the line between nihilism and revelry — it’s folk punk as a last laugh before the gallows.
Musical Style:
Imagine if Tom Waits fronted a ragtag jug band with a penchant for punk rock and necromancy. Fiddle, banjo, upright bass, and gravel-throated vocals howl through tracks that are theatrical, darkly humorous, and defiantly alive. The band seamlessly swings between drunken singalongs, eerie gospel dirges, and speed-picking breakdowns with macabre flair.
For Fans Of:
Amigo the Devil, Days N’ Daze, The Dead South, Devil Makes Three, Those Poor Bastards
Verdict:
Here’s to the Devil is a devilish delight — irreverent, raw, and irresistibly catchy. Bridge City Sinners don’t just blur the line between folk and punk, they take a chainsaw to it. Raise your glass, light a candle, and toast the darkness.