Running With The Dogs (Deluxe) The Treatment

Album info

Album-Release:
2013

HRA-Release:
07.02.2023

Label: Spinefarm

Genre: Rock

Subgenre: Hard Rock

Artist: The Treatment

Album including Album cover

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Formats & Prices

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FLAC 44.1 $ 14.90
  • 1 I Bleed Rock + Roll 03:03
  • 2 Drop Like A Stone 03:03
  • 3 Get The Party On 04:14
  • 4 Running With The Dogs 03:48
  • 5 Intro/ The Outlaw 03:50
  • 6 Emergency 04:06
  • 7 She's Too Much 03:20
  • 8 Cloud Across The Sun 03:59
  • 9 Don't Look Down 03:59
  • 10 World On Fire 03:01
  • 11 What Is There To Say? 03:24
  • 12 Unchain My World 03:47
  • 13 Don't Get Mad Get Evil 03:51
  • 14 Way Of The World 03:38
  • 15 The Seeker 03:16
  • 16 She Does It Right 03:21
  • 17 No Matter What 03:11
  • 18 In My Chair 03:05
  • 19 Running With The Dogs (Acoustic) 03:15
  • 20 I Bleed Rock + Roll (Acoustic) 02:51
  • Total Runtime 01:10:02

Info for Running With The Dogs (Deluxe)



The still very young year 2014 already offers a classic rock highlight in a class of its own: Running With the Dogs is the second studio album by the band from Cambridge / UK, who, as true youngsters (the youngest members were just 15 years old when the band was founded), have already caused a sensation on numerous tours with greats such as Motörhead, Kiss, Mötley Crüe, Alice Cooper, Steel Panther and most recently Airbourne. Now, The Treament have set their sights on reaping the rewards of their live experiences and are releasing their second studio album, the first release since their 5-track EP Then & Again, which featured cover songs from the 70s and was released in January 2013 via Spinefarm. Then & Again bowed to the band's roots in style with an exquisite song selection, but left no clues as to how they would sound on album number 2. Will they continue on the path they started on, or take a turn and dare a radical new beginning? Well, the 13 tracks of Running With the Dogs sound as if the band had equipped the car they built with their debut album with a more powerful engine, wider tyres and an enormously loud exhaust. Once again, Iron Maiden mastermind Steve Harris' Barnyard Studios served as the workshop, with producer Laurie Mansworth and mixer Tony Newton working on the sound as usual. Already the opener "I Bleed Rock'n'Roll", whose video clip was presented at the start of the tour with Airbourne, is more than an introduction to the album, but can calmly be seen as a statement. But that doesn't mean that the album is full-on rocking from start to finish, as there are, for example, more mellow tracks like "Cloud Across The Sun" and "Unchain My World", which are juxtaposed with powerful rockers like The Outlaw (feat. Hank Williamson from The BossHoss), Don't Look Down and "Drop Like A Stone" and provide a balance. Just in time for the first headline tour through Europe, the first single Emergency will be released, a mid-tempo stomper with a driving riff that perfectly combines the bandwidth of Running With the Dogs and will sweep away the fans. In short: The Treatment 2014 is the therapy prescribed by the rock'n'roll doctor.

Matt Jones, vocals
Ben Brookland, guitar
Tagore Grey, guitar
Dhani Mansworth, drums
Rick Newman, bass



The Treatment
AT A TIME when so much rock music is defined according to a specific genre or sub-genre, it's refreshing for a new band to come along who are both happy and proud to be called simply ‘rock'... and when that band are still enjoying their teenage years, then the project becomes very exciting indeed: classic sounds filtered through young hearts an' minds.

A five-strong outfit based in the Cambridge area of the UK, The Treatment are indeed tender in years, but you'd never guess that from the quality of their song-writing or the confident swagger of their live show. It's only really the exuber-ance and in-built energy of their playing that gives the game away, adding a fresh-faced twist to some deeply classic grooves.

Combining the drive of early Def Leppard with the song-writing ability of prime UFO and Thin Lizzy, the whole thing underpinned by the sort of low-slung riffing redolent of early Aerosmith or G n' R, The Treatment are unashamedly inspired by an era when rock bands looked like rock bands and were generally intent on causing a stir (both onstage and off); an era when the lifestyle was important, when music was everything and when vinyl was king.

Already the five have a strong selection of material to their name, with 12-track debut album ‘This Might Hurt' sounding more like a ‘Greatest Hits' package than a debut recording; produced by experienced musician Laurie Mansworth (guitarist/songwriter with UK melodic rockers Airrace and with a new album of his own just out) and mixed by Tony Newton at Iron Maiden guitarist Steve Harris' Barnyard Studios, it's clear that these guys are hugely proud of their home-grown roots, with anthem-in-the-making ‘Nothing To Lose But Our Minds' tapping into the work of such quintessentially UK outfits as Mott The Hoople.

From the unbridled power-rush of ‘Departed', through statement track ‘The Doctor', onto out‘n'out rock juggernauts like ‘Lady Of The Night', ‘Shake The Mountain' and first single/video ‘Drink, F**k, Fight', The Treatment show they have the hunger and the drive to be an essential part of The Great Rock Revival; at a time when the genre is looking for true champions to slay the pop dragon and take the movement boldly into the future, The Treatment have the talent and the charisma to mark their mark worldwide. Being so young, they also have the time, but there's no hint of resting on laurels here.

Not only are The Treatment the real deal, they're 100 per cent fired up and ready to roll, having already put in a number of years of noses-to-the-grindstone dues-payin'. Since 2008, when 15-year-old schoolboy drummer Dhani Mansworth (son of Laurie) decided to put a band together, inspired by the all-time greats of the genre (AC/DC, Led Zeppelin, etc.) and working under the wing of his father and manager Laurie (More, Airrace, Roadstar), the search was on to find fellow rock-headed, leather-wrapped musicians old an' wise beyond their years.

Unable to source players of the required standard, however, this search was soon extended to more far-flung parts of the country, and bit by bit the line-up began to take shape. First to join was lead guitarist Ben Brookland, then bassist Rick Newman (aka Swoggle), then rhythm guitarist Tagore Grey... but it was the crucial position of front-man that proved the hardest to fill, and it was a full six months before vocalist Matt Jones was (finally) discovered in Norwich.

This album contains no booklet.

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