Cincinnati, OH (Top40 Charts/ Sun Pedal Recordings) The hook-heavy rock band Buffalo
Killers were in LA last month performing at the second annual
Freaks For The Festival as well as appearing on shows up and down the California coast. The group was direct support for the legendary Chris Robinson Brotherhood where they played a blistering live set to a full crowd at Joshua Tree. "Pappy and Harriet's is always a really great time and so far off the grid, that people disengage and finally get their fucking faces out of their phones. You can really get outside your head there and, as the wise Shaman told us, 'Don't panic.'," laughed vocalist Zach Gabbard. Check them out late Wednesday night, June 4th on Last Call with Carson Daly.
STREAM HEAVY REVERIE ON CLASSIC ROCK MAGAZINE: https://bit.ly/1pSZfVf
Sun Pedal Recordings still has some of the limited edition
Heavy Reverie bundles available via their online store. Packages include vinyl test pressings, hand drawn artwork, a T-shirt, and more. Purchase a bundle and get an immediate download of the new album here.
SEE WHAT PEOPLE HAVE BEEN SAYING ABOUT THE BUFFALO KILLERS
"I have been into those guys for a long time. Back when they were in Thee Shams I brought them on the road with The
Black Keys. I didn't hear anything from them for a while after Thee Shams disbanded until the next thing I know the Buffalo
Killers first record is coming out. I bought a copy of it and was stunned, like 'Holy shit.' They transformed from a good garage rock band to light years ahead of what they were doing in terms of songwriting, arrangement and harmonies." - Dan Auerbach from The
Black Keys
"One of the best (expletive) rock 'n' roll bands in the world." - Chris Robinson from The
Black Crowes
"Heavy on the heavy and with plenty of hooks" - High Times
"Buffalo
Killers are back with
Heavy Reverie, and they're going for the throat with a record that should situate the band for full throttle rock stardom. They've brought along a new label (Sun Pedal Recordings - Warner
Music Group), a new producer (the legendary Jim Wirt), and hell, they even mixed it on the Neve console that gave birth to Michael Jackson's Thriller demos." - Tony Conley / Rock Guitar Daily
"There's something in the water in Ohio, and Buffalo
Killers have sucked it down and are ready to share it far and wide" Hittin' The Note
"The Cincinnati group keeps evolving into something bigger and with their last several releases they have established themselves as an act to follow." - The Fire Note
"They're Chris Robinson-endorsed and definitely have that rootsy sway of The
Black Crowes at their finest - but there's a stomp and a stamp that Buffalo
Killers have produced that is all their own." - Off The Tracks
"Buffalo
Killers take aim at garage, swamp blues, '60s psych, Canyon harmonies and Southern roots and land their prey every time." - Nigel Williamson / UNCUT
"Golden nostalgic bliss…Cincinnati's incredible Buffalo
Killers will show you exactly where
Kings of Leon went wrong." - Chris Deville / THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
"Not many bands have mined a late hippie-era approach with more satisfying results." - Mark Deming / ALL MUSIC
"Big riffs rule, and at no time more than the '70s did they dominate the airwaves. Cincinnati's Buffalo
Killers evoke the blurry Polaroid sounds of those years, grooving like Foghat one minute, recalling the melodic gold of Badfinger another, and utterly, unironically rocking like ZZ Top. There's nothing quite as simple and effective as a "'power trio.' The three were members of the dearly departed garage rock outfit Thee Shams, but Buffalo
Killers isn't three chord frat rock at all. The songs are thick and greasy, and listening to the trio live, you can see why they've made fans of The
Black Keys and The
Black Crows." - Jason Woodbury / PHOENIX NEW TIMES
"Buffalo
Killers definitely have a cool Joe Walsh/James Gang influence in their sound. I dig 'em." -
Alice Cooper / NIGHTS WITH ALICE COOPER
"Cincinnati trio Buffalo
Killers find that drawing from '60s and '70s rock icons continues to provide fresh ideas filled with a tunefulness and musical vocabulary that is indebted to rock's golden era with a refreshing vibrancy." - Kyle Melton / DAYTON CITY PAPER