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I remember being very
surprised to read that The Rogue's March had been asked to play "The Warped
Tour". Sure they were a very good bar band and "Never Fear" was a fine album,
but that's all they were was a bar band. That opinion changed upon hearing
"Chaser" the band's 1998 (and soon to be re-released nation wide) album. Not
only should The Rogue's March have been on the bill but a darn sight higher up
it.
The Rogue's March have
matured both musically and lyrically over the 4 years between "Never Fear" and
"Chaser" and now also have the excellent production of James Mastro to do full
justice to the songs.
"Chaser" is packed full of Joe
Hurley's tales of low-life on the big city (New York, London, Paris and Berlin),
cheap whiskey, violence, psychos and whores.
The band are real musical magpies, sure it's still the
Irish-Country-Punk of "Never Fear" but your going to hear classic rock'n'roll,
cabaret, post punk, some Nick Cave/Tom Waits style ballads and a couple of
tracks that The Rolling Stones could have written when they were anygood.
Hopefully Chaser takes The Rogue's March to the next level.
Recommended.
Joe Strummer
and The Mescaleros: Global A Go-Go (CD)
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The
coolest man on the planet is back in action.
Joe and the Pesky Meskys are back with their second
release on Hellcat records. Lest there be any illusions on my feelings for Mr.
Strummer, the statement above alone should shatter them. Strummer and the Clash
are, in my eyes, the most important figures in the history of punk rock. Well,
at least in the Top 5. So, when Joe signed with Hellcat a few years ago and
released his first album, “Rock, Art and the X-Ray Style,” I was ecstatic. I
bought the album and liked it quite a bit. I got pretty much what I expected -
an eclectic mix of styles and experiments with world music/beats (Caribbean,
African, South American) glued together by that familiar Strummer vocal style.
I was, however, somewhat surprised by the backlash by
some of the ‘fans.’ Joe has always pushed the Clash beyond three-chord punk rock
into reggae, rockabilly, rap and numerous other musical style, to mixed-reviews,
but as always, it’s the people’s vote that matters: They say when “Sandinista”
was released, you could walk around in Brooklyn and hear strains of early rap
pioneers alongside “The Magnificent Seven” blasting out from the ghettos and
street corners. Joe isn’t going to remain stagnant and he isn’t going to release
an album like the first Clash LP, so get over it.
That said, “Global A Go-Go” is a fairly accurate title.
Global is the scope and also the musical style. The album encompasses the
aforementioned different music genres and a wealth of musical instruments, mixes
and dubs, as did its predecessor. Starting with the almost folksy “Johnny
Appleseed” you can tell Joe and the boys are in top form. “Cool ‘N’ Out’ sounds
like it could’ve come off “Sandanista” with it’s dubby overtones and almost
techno-ish backbeat, with Joe dropping science over a horn section in the
background. The title track rocks out again with a world-ish type beat, complete
with the raging bongos. “Bhindi Bhagee” is an example of an
African/Caribbean-style rocker. Joe mixes balladry, like on “Mondo Bongo” and
experimentation and rockers throughout, closing with a 17:00 version of the old
Irish song “The Minstrel Boy” which is a masterpiece. Joe’s vocals are ethereal,
far in the background, almost ghostly, fitting the subject matter perfectly,
while the tune itself gets a more dubby/techno-ish mix: A song and an album with
a vision and a message - many messages. Just what you would expect from ol’ Joe.
So it goes with this eclectic album.
Judging by the reviews posted on Hell-cat.com, most fans
get what Joe is doing, but you have the occasional mug who posts something along
the ridiculous lines of: “ok I really dont like this album cuz its like fucking
folk and country and shit but I wouldnt talk shit about the Clash if I had
fucking gun to my head the Clash was awesome” (an actual post.) Wow. How
eloquent and introspective, considering the Clash loved and utilized both folk
and country. Oh well, if the Offspring t-shirt wearing mall-punks don’t like
this, than it’s all the more punk in my opinion. Before the release of his first
album for Hellcat, Joe said “this aint no kiddie rockabilly” and he’s right.
He’s older, more mature and shouldn’t be expected to re-write albums he wrote in
his twenties. Tunnel vision is the enemy of good music, he believes. To quote
Joe "Whether it’s jazz or punk or anything else, you have to fight against the
purists who want to narrow the definition. That’s what kills music because it
stifles it to death."
The Real
McKenzies: Loch'd & Loaded (CD)
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Vancouver’s favorite
pissy-drunk Scottish-Canadian sons are at it again with their third full-length
LP “Loch’d and Loaded.” This marks the Real Macs debut in the spotlight, so to
speak: on Honest Don’s Records, a subsidiary of Fat Wreck Chords. This is no
surprise, as Fat Mike, the owner of both, once raved the Macs were “the best
band I’ve ever seen.” For those of you unfamiliar with the Macs, I’d say that
if, back in the 13th Century, William Wallace commissioned the Rezillos, the
Skids or any other upstart, ’77-style Scottish punk band to march alongside his
pipers into battle, this was what you would get: anthemic, melodious and
fast-driven punk songs, propelled along by bagpipes, a healthy dose of Scottish
pride, and fuelled by the water of life. Suffice to say, the troops would be
pumped enough to fill Loch Ness with the bodies of invading Englishmen.
While their first two efforts were solid and, in several
instances, brilliant, their third LP eclipses all expectations. The production
is first rate and all the songs scream melody. Call-and-response vocals fill the
songs and they stick to you like the spleen of the enemy you just hacked apart
out on the Scottish glen. The musicianship has also vastly improved and the
album rocks with a sense of Gaelic purpose on the verge of going AWOL. The Macs
do the ’77-style so right, it’s scary and the pipe playing is top notch and
utilized in nearly every track. Lyrically, the Macs deal with themes of
rebellion, drinking and most other things Scottish and it works very well, in a
more humorous and light-hearted tone than many other bands of the genre.
So, although the other two Macs releases seemed spotty,
(and are harder to get anyway) this exceeded all my expectations. Favorite
tracks include “Nessie,” “Pickled,” “Scots ‘Round the World” “Swords of a
Thousand Men” and my favorite, “Wild Cattieyote.” Also included are the trads
“Flower of Scotland,” “Bonnie Mary,” and the hilarious “Donald Where’s Yer
Troosers?” (Once done to perfection by the Men They Couldn’t Hang.) Pick it up
as soon as possible, by a bottle of Glen Fiddich or Glen Livet (any Glen will
do) paint your face, put in “Braveheart” with volume down and throw this in and
see if you have any furniture left in tact at the end of the night.
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Darkbuster (5 tracks)
This is Darkbuster’s swansong (very Led Zeppelin eh?), who
have sadly split up after their Middle East show last month. This is fast catchy
Budweiser soaked party punk with balls. A little mellower then live; more a pub
punk feel especially on “Good Times” with its boozy barroom chorus, also check
out the bastardization of “Danny Boy”, where Danny moves to London and ends up
on the skids.
Recommended.
Tommy & the Terrors (4 tracks)
First off apologies to T. & the T., last month I
claimed they were now a four piece in my live review; actually Mike is now
playing guitar and a new bass player has joined – must have been real drunk
guys. T. & the T. play “Yobcore”; a cross between Oi, Street Punk with a
good dose of old school Boston hardcore played with the f**k you attitude of a
soccer hooligan. With the exception of the Oi-ish “Washed Up” with its fluid
guitar playing the T. & the T. songs on offer here are tipping the needle
towards the hardcore end of the scale. Defiantly music for those with more
extreme taste.
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One of the best things about
running a zine is it allows me to be exposed to music I’d never otherwise have
the opportunity to hear. Siobhan from British occupied America (Only Joking guys
– they are from Ottawa, Canada) are a perfect example. Siobhan are a heavily
Pogues influence Irish-folk-punk band with a good dose of Jewish/Russian Klezmer
thrown in to spice up the mix.
“McGravy’s Iron Liver” is a six song CD-EP “recorded very
live at home with a single microphone”, but nevertheless has excellent sound.
Track one “Roll me to the Ground”, is very Poguesy, very “Red Roses for me”,
“Canon in D” is that classical piece by Pachelbel usually heard on toilet paper
commercials and the like, Siobhan merge it with some Russian jig type music to
create an Irish-Russian-Classical-Jig-Punk™ instrumental type thing. “Augeline”
is a mellower acoustic / Irish number and the traditional “Recruiting Sergeant”
most of you will be familiar with from either The Clancy’s version or The Pogues
“Medley”. “Rose of London” is a slower darker drinking number that’s a little
too close musically to “Boolavogue”. The CD end’s with the fast Irish/Russian
Jig Punk of “The Celtbot”, if you can imagine drunken Russian sailors on a
Dublin pub crawl this is that sound.
A great introduction to a very enthusiastic young band from
Canada (Only Joking guys – they are from British occupied America).
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Not quite in the
Irish-Folk-Punk-Whateverthefuck category is Skanatra.
Skanatra’s début self-titled CD could be reviewed in two
words “this grooves”. If you haven’t guessed from the band name, Hoboken’s
(where else could they be from) Skanatra are a Ska tribute band to the chairman
of the Board, Frank Sinatra. Ten tracks of Frank’s best know classics ("Lady Is
a Tramp", "Fly Me to the Moon", "High Hopes", "Witchcraft", "The Coffee Song",
"Luck Be a Lady", "My Kind of Town", "I've Got You Under My Skin", "New York,
New York", "That's Life"), all catchy as hell yet still true to the originals. A
great party album.
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Wow! Heavy shit here.
Uncompromising early 80's influenced punk rock . DSS are a Birmingham, UK based
mostly Irish punk band - like the Exploited with an Irish touch. No chance of
ever seeing these guys on "The Warped Tour" - and I doubt they want to be on it.
Punk rock at it's purest. The title track is about 70's Glam Star Garry Glitter
and how the pervert got himself in trouble.
Best track
is "Wannabe" which contains the classic line " I wanna be like Shane MacGowan -
sing Billy's Bones and The Dirty Old Town"
Not for the
faint hearted or those easily offended