Baggy$$
by Fcukers

— Released 6th September 2024 on Technicolour

“fuck no, homie don’t shake” — from the opening lines of their new single, “Homie Don’t Shake”, there’s no mistaking the irreverent musings of Fcukers’ Shanny Wise. Delivered over a groove-heavy bassline punctuated by distorted guitar riffs courtesy of producer, bassist and keys player Jackson Walker Lewis, and backed by bouncy, peak-time percussion from drummer Ben Scharf — it’s a perfect encapsulation of the sound the much-hyped trio have been cultivating for the past ...

“fuck no, homie don’t shake” — from the opening lines of their new single, “Homie Don’t Shake”, there’s no mistaking the irreverent musings of Fcukers’ Shanny Wise. Delivered over a groove-heavy bassline punctuated by distorted guitar riffs courtesy of producer, bassist and keys player Jackson Walker Lewis, and backed by bouncy, peak-time percussion from drummer Ben Scharf — it’s a perfect encapsulation of the sound the much-hyped trio have been cultivating for the past year and half.

Instantly recognisable to anyone who has attended a Fcukers live show show in recent times the single comes with the announcement of their forthcoming debut EP, ‘Baggy$$’ — set for release on Ninja Tune’s Technicolour imprint on September 6th — and follows a whirlwind 18 months for the band in which they have carved out a fierce and growing reputation as one of the most exciting acts operating out of NYC.

Across six-tracks that also span high-energy, 90’s-inspired dance & electronics of previous single “Bon Bon” — which saw support from the likes of NYLON, NME, Stereogum, So Young, Brooklyn Vegan, Marg.mp3, Perfectly Imperfect and many more — through electro-tinged rumblings of “Tommy”, and the decidedly sultry and downtempo “I Don’t Wanna”, the band follow-through on the promise shown on their previously self-released singles: “Mothers” and “Devils Cut” (and a choice remix of the James Murphy-featuring single "Los Angeles") to deliver one of this year’s standout debuts. 

Baggy$$
by Fcukers

— Released 6th September 2024 on Technicolour

Physical

LP (TCLR060)

Limited White Label

Black 140g 12” vinyl, housed in a white sleeve.

£13.50
 

Digital

MP3 (TCLRDNL060)
£3.50
 
16-bit WAV (TCLRDNL060W)
£4.40
 

Physical

Digital

LP (TCLR060)

Limited White Label

Black 140g 12” vinyl, housed in a white sleeve.

£13.50
MP3 (TCLRDNL060)
£3.50
16-bit WAV (TCLRDNL060W)
£4.40

Tracklist

“fuck no, homie don’t shake” — from the opening lines of their new single, “Homie Don’t Shake”, there’s no mistaking the irreverent musings of Fcukers’ Shanny Wise. Delivered over a groove-heavy bassline punctuated by distorted guitar riffs courtesy of producer, bassist and keys player Jackson Walker Lewis, and backed by bouncy, peak-time percussion from drummer Ben Scharf — it’s a perfect encapsulation of the sound the much-hyped trio have been cultivating for the past ...

“fuck no, homie don’t shake” — from the opening lines of their new single, “Homie Don’t Shake”, there’s no mistaking the irreverent musings of Fcukers’ Shanny Wise. Delivered over a groove-heavy bassline punctuated by distorted guitar riffs courtesy of producer, bassist and keys player Jackson Walker Lewis, and backed by bouncy, peak-time percussion from drummer Ben Scharf — it’s a perfect encapsulation of the sound the much-hyped trio have been cultivating for the past year and half.

Instantly recognisable to anyone who has attended a Fcukers live show show in recent times the single comes with the announcement of their forthcoming debut EP, ‘Baggy$$’ — set for release on Ninja Tune’s Technicolour imprint on September 6th — and follows a whirlwind 18 months for the band in which they have carved out a fierce and growing reputation as one of the most exciting acts operating out of NYC.

Across six-tracks that also span high-energy, 90’s-inspired dance & electronics of previous single “Bon Bon” — which saw support from the likes of NYLON, NME, Stereogum, So Young, Brooklyn Vegan, Marg.mp3, Perfectly Imperfect and many more — through electro-tinged rumblings of “Tommy”, and the decidedly sultry and downtempo “I Don’t Wanna”, the band follow-through on the promise shown on their previously self-released singles: “Mothers” and “Devils Cut” (and a choice remix of the James Murphy-featuring single "Los Angeles") to deliver one of this year’s standout debuts.