Haz calls the album a "soulful infused truth of the ups and comedowns".
The musicians - their third member is Lui Gumaka - have spent three years on the album, which was meant to be released in January. Home Brew's hunger to get it perfect delayed the release until May.
"The album was finished in September, but there is a lot more to be done then just writing the words. Haz really wanted to go to town with it," Tom says.
You may expect the 27-year-old to enthuse about the launch, but Tom says much has changed since they finished the album last year - not least himself.
"As an artist I just always want to keep pushing myself and try different things. I didn't know about the world six months ago.I hadn't seen Cambodia; I didn't know what genocide was. There are so many things I've learned about."
He says listening to the album now "is like having to meet the person you were six months ago. It's a cliche but the more you know, the more you don't know".
Home Brew is not signed to a record label. Instead, Tom has formed his own, Young, Gifted and Broke, which acts as a creative hub for like-minded musicians. "It's our circle, all of our people, on a website. We want to get everyone out there otherwise they would just be sitting in their bedrooms making music forever."
The band also uses the Bandcamp website to sell their music. Listeners pay what they think it's worth. The website takes a small cut of profits. Home Brew are big on being different and will also be involved in another form of marketing in May when they perform a "hostile takeover" of music magazine Volume. Editor Sam Wicks describes the trio as musical geniuses and has given them full license to translate that to print for one edition.
Tom, who studied psychology and philosophy at Auckland University, says his music is best described as existential. "It's about my existence and analysing my existence whether I'm at a barbecue or talking about immortality. I'm always analysing existence, what's going on, why it's going on."
Having played at the 2011 Big Day Out and being nominated for the 2010 Music Awards Critics' Choice prize, Tom and Haz say financial rewards are rare.
"I do music because I don't want to waste a single second doing anything I don't like," Tom says. "I might be broke and 27, and I still can't afford my own car, but I haven't wasted my life working in a factory job or doing something that I'm scared of. That's my way to battle death."
SIP AND SEE
WHAT Home Brew's album, Home Brew, is released on May 1 (JB Hi-Fi, Real Groovy, Conch Records. It can also be ordered on ITunes).
WITH 48-hour release party at Shooters Salon bar in Kingsland, May 5.
WEB homebrewcrew.co.nz
Watch the Home Brew takeover of Volume magazine. (Note: This video contains language and images that may be considered offensive)