-(16)- have revealed that they will be releasing a new covers album, titled “Forgeries Vol 1 (1972 – 1984),” on May 1. The effort’s first single, a cover of Bee Gees’ “Tragedy,” can be found below:

“Forgeries Vol 1 (1972 – 1984)” Track Listing:
01. “Can’t Get Enough” (Scorpions cover)
02. “Nausea” (X cover)
03. “Cities on Flame with Rock and Roll” (Blue Öyster Cult cover)
04. “Rotten to the Core” (Rudimentary Peni cover)
05. “Mother Mary” (UFO cover)
06. “Tragedy” (Bee Gees cover)
07. “Bloodstains” (Agent Orange cover)
08. “Beat My Head Against The Wall” (Black Flag cover)
09. “St. Vitus Dance” (Black Sabbath cover)
10. “Foreign Policy” (Fear cover)
The band shared more information on the release:
“There comes a point in every band’s life when originality stops being a virtue and honesty takes the wheel.
On their 11th long-playing record: ‘Forgeries (72-84),’ -(16)- return to the impulse that first dragged them into loud rooms and bad ideas: the urge to steal what we love and make it semi-unrecognizable through devotion. We have partnered with Heavy Psych Sounds Records to release a collection of covers that function less as homage and more as a possession to be given away. The artwork, rendered by the ever-amazing Marald, completes the ritual, iconic, unsettling, and unafraid.
We’ve always believed that a great cover is not mimicry but revelation. It’s finding a song that’s already lived inside you since youth and letting it crawl out, bruised and changed. From the early ’90s onward, -(16)- have treated covers as translations rather than as replicas, acts of tribute and emulation, filtered through distortion, fatigue, and lived experience. These are songs that taught us how to stand, how to fall, and how to keep going.
In our collective head, this album exists because these songs demanded it. Because they screamed copy me, and we listened. In the end, ‘Forgeries (72–84)’ stands as both a thank you note and a theft, a reminder that all music worth a damn is borrowed, broken, and passed on between friends.
The selections on ‘Forgeries (72–84)’ span eras and attitudes, unified not by genre but by necessity. Each track is a document of obsession, of influence absorbed and re-expressed without permission.”
Leave a comment