Hailing from Boston Ma, The Freight are an “upbeat fusion of Rock N’ Roll, Blues Rock, Soul and Jam mixed with a contemporary Modern Rock edge,” they embrace every avenue of rock, from classic sounds to 80’s and 90’s rock and their influences include a wide variety of artists including; The Stones, Zeppelin, The Beatles, The Cars, The Police, White Denim, The Black Keys and Gov’t Mule.
The Freight are Adam Tiro on guitar and vocals, Stephen Anderson on bass, Greg Tragellis on keys and vocals, Marc Loverin on drums and John Marinilli on percussion and as soon as the opening drums kicked in, I knew I was going to love this track.
A track that erupts as soon as it starts, this has plenty of guitar riffs and pounding drums to keep even the harshest of critics happy.
A guitar-driven song, the crunching riffs are prevalent all the way through and the guitar solo, classic in style with a hint of blues thrown in, is superb. The pounding, crashing drums are full of energy and the bass lines that pop their heads up throughout the song are strong and funky.
The vocals on this track are amazing, strong, powerful and with a grittiness that takes full control of the song.
This is just pure, in your face, rock n roll, and if you are not bouncing around your living room whilst listening to this, do you even like music??
I absolutely loved this but, I must admit, that I do have just one gripe with it! IT’S NOT LONG ENOUGH!! As soon as I got boogeying away to it, it stopped! So, of course, I had to listen to it on repeat four, five, six times more!
Love, love, loved it! More please!

This review is purely the property of The Metal Asylum