Monday, March 9, 2026

Beasts of Bourbon toast 35 years of The Low Road with expanded 2LP reissue!

The boffo new 2LP edition of The Low Road comes with a bonus album of rippin' Beasts live recordings circa 1991 & '92.


Here's the scoop...

Late in 1991, Beasts Of Bourbon unleashed their fourth album ‘The Low Road’.

Armed with a rejuvenated rhythm section relative to its predecessor (1990’s Black Milk) with Tony Pola and Brian Hooper on drums and bass guitar respectively, with this new lineup, the Australian rock supergroup enlisted producer Tony Cohen, an engineer best known for his exceptional production work with Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds and the Birthday Party – at Metropolis Studios (Melbourne) in April 1991. 

Among the album’s nefarious delights were the blistering Chase the Dragon’ (about heroin smuggling), a cover of AC/DC’s slow and insinuating `Ride On’ and the Hendrix-flavoured ‘Just Right’.

The album was supported by a tour with the inaugural Big Day Out alongside Nirvana and Violent Femmes alongside European dates where the band had earned a loyal fanbase. 

Ian McFarlane in The Encyclopedia of Australian Rock & Pop described the album as ‘brimming with urgency, surrealism, atmosphere, myth, illusion and honesty, but above all, hard-nosed rock riffs’.

Now in 2026 to mark the 35th anniversary of the album, we’re proud to present the album in expanded form on vinyl 2LP 180-gram black vinyl. 

The original 10-track album makes up the first LP, with the second LP consisting of seven live tracks recorded at the infamous Phoenician Club, Sydney through 1991 and 1992 alongside an epic live rendering of the Stones ‘Cocksucker Blues’ recorded at Theatre Fabrik, Munich in 1992.

The package is all housed in a beautiful gatefold sleeve with photography from Red Eye Records founder John Foy, Bleddyn Butcher and Mr Speedieflex.

The Beasts of Bourbon - Low Road - Available March 27th. Check out Tex Perkins site for more info Watch a few video clips from the album along with some footage of the Beasts tearing up the Phoenician Club back in 1991 and 1992. 





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