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Songs for Your Sister

Track Listing

01. Mighty Jones
02. O Dear (live)
03. Some Of Them Are Nice Days
04. The Drunken Prowler
05. I feel gay
06. Thats a keeper
07. Monkeywrencher Love Song
08. You Will Succeed
09. Ze Last Drag (intro)
10. Ze Last Drag (live)
11. Laundry Room Piano
12. Wife During Wartime (live)
13. Greensleeves

Production Credits

For Pierre Michel, our friend and brother.


Dr.Carl Honey - sings and plays lead and rhythem guitars, and keyboads, and flute.

Dory Honey - sings and plays banjo, slide guitar, lead and rythem guitars, ukulele, harmonica, and sometimes bass.

Honey duContra - plays drums, tambourine, skins, tommytomtoms, and sings harmony.

Huckleberry Hoyt Honey - sings and plays ukulele, piano, xylophone, melodica, recorder, keyboards and sometimes drums.

“Kid” Walker Honey - Plays bass and sings harmony.

Our brother Mighty Honey played bass & sang harmony on eight of these tracks.

 

Production Credits

Produced by Ari Gold. Assistant Producers: Daniel Posner, Adrian Grenier and Andrew Vladeck.

 

Songs for Your Sister

2006

Buy it now: iTunes Amazon

"Songs For Your Sister" ~ 21 (yes 21!) songs now available on I-Tunes! And you can download the art and lyrics for the album free here.

Reviews

"Glam ukulele rock that manages to reference the country-tinged sensitivity of the Silver Jews, the Beach Boys’ summery harmonies and the playful weirdness of Ween."

-The Village Voice

 

"Some seriously good rock’n'roll."

-Paper Magazine

 

"This New York quartet peddles savvy, glam-inflected pop songs written sideways – the hooks are all there, but in the strangest places – and played on ukuleles."

-Kurt B. Reighley, The Seattle Stranger

 

"The New York-based band of brothers offered up and infectious blend of zany country-tinged power pop (think of Ween meets Weezer circa the Blue Album). On their debut mini-tour, The Honey Brothers proved to be every bit as bodacious as they set out to be. Among an oft listless crowd of San Francisco hipsters, the Brothers managed to get more than a few arms uncrossed and clapping."

-Christina Troup, The Oakland Tribune