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Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Brad Marino

Agent of Chaos

(Spaghetty Town Records/Beluga/Ghost Highway Recordings)



Classic Rock'n'Roll fashionings with a bit of an edge, throughout which elates Power Pop hookery that instills warm sensations. Should requests for beaming music with serious teeth ring out - and they so often do - Brad and compadres will meet the demand. See, brightly colorful and anthemic merriment is their specialty.

Recommended: "Blowing Smoke," "Voodoo," "Murder and Violence," "Calling Your Bluff," "Lost Without You," "Devil May Care," "Sick of You," "Reason or Rhyme," "Make This Last"

Videos: "Voodoo"   "Murder and Violence"   "Calling Your Bluff"   "Devil May Care"   "


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Spaghetty Town Records

Ghost Highway Recordings

Beluga Records

Bandcamp

Juno Records

Amazon

Apple


The Edwoods / A. Clementina

"Plan 9" / "Danger!"

(Headshrinker Records)



Two specimina of under-soil Garagery, with emphases on dire formulizing. Dense, harsh cacophony marks the former - a sort of crashes and bashes brutalizing - while Headshrinker Alaska (under sobriquet "A. Clementina") offers up startling pronouncements, as exclusively bass-and-drums desolation rivets.

Video: "Plan 9" / "Danger!"


Facebook  (Edwoods)

Instagram  (Headshrinker Alaska)

Headshrinker Records

Bandcamp


The Edwoods


Headshrinker Alaska

Horror Deluxe, A. Clementina

"Videodromo" & "I'm Just a Monster"   digital

(Headshrinker Records)


What fresh/cool madness is this? The he and she skronk-mongers* of HD, and sparseness shoveler Headshrinker Alaska, scatch across wax portraits unnerving. Instance the first? A twisted wreck of torn metalpunk tittilation. Flip "A. Clementina" entry? An insistent,  guitarless, stream-of-unhingedness. 

Video: promo clip


Facebook (Horror Deluxe)

Instagram (Headshrinker Alaska)

Headshrinker Records

Bandcamp


* A term borrowed from late Creem scribe Rick Johnson.



Horror Deluxe



Headshrinker Alaska

El Vidocq (compiler)

Strip-O-Rama vol 3

(Jukebox Music Factory)



Before your mind's gutter-eye slink undraped pulchritude - mascaraed baby blues barely open and curvy pins, pillars of provocation - while the blinking Seeburg in the runway's shadow gives out with sax honks, visceral beats, and inspirations to wantonness. Sequins. Fishnets. Tassels. Pasties. Busty St. Claire shows the boys what mamas have, since time immemorial, warned them against being led astray by. Musicians across the sounds spectrum, worshipped by collectors of dusty wax on labels few recall, shout the joys of silk-sheet misbehavior. Here's to the doll parade.

Recommended: "Hardhead" (Louis Jordan), "Lookout Mountain" (Chuck Miller), "Not Much of a Future, But Man What a Past" (Bob Roubian)," "So Young" (Clyde Stacy), "Why Don't You Do Right" (Joanie Sommers), "The Coo" (Wayne Cochran), "Morgus the Magnificent" (Morgus & the Ghouls), "Well Do It" (Ella Johnson)

Videos: "Not Much of a Future, But Man What a Past"   "So Young"   "Morgus the Magnificent"   "Well Do It"


Bandcamp

El Vidocq 

rarewaves

Flight 13

Soundflat

Greyville Records

Bear Family

Discogs



Jennie Lee

Jenna Coote's stage name is the sole artficiality around, as she and crackerjack rhythmaires reanimate a hardwood treasure with homebrewed joy juice.

Video: "Let's Have a Party" (Rockabilly Rave 2026)


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Glenn Doran and the Truffle Valley Boys

Fancy-footed mandolin, drums, acoustic gut-boxes, banjo, and double bass collude like seasoned pals, their hatted operators in an upper Bluegrass stratum where good times splash beyond creek beds. "Pull the trigger, watch 'em roll. Now I know I'll make my goal in this pinball game that's gonna bring me fame!" declares drawling Glenn, as had countless country jacks in decades since Johnny came marching home. 

Video: "Pinball Millionaire" (Rockabilly Rave 2026)


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Robert Gordon and Chris Spedding: Pair nonpareil





Scandalously electric Rock'n'Roll was not the passing craze 1950s detractors hoped it would be. Of racially and experientially blended character, the defiantly upstart style was much more powerful than the milquetoastian societal strictures it flattened.

In its fecund youth, Rock'n'Roll spoke to and for entire swaths of under-celebrated America: the poor, blue collar workers, blacks, teenagers. Anyone who dwelt 'outside,' and intuited that the mannerly crooners blaring from 'Your Hit Parade' broadcasts weren't of them, and didn't care to be. Powdered songbirds would probably shrink from the egalitarian prospect.

During the 1970s, Punk savages essentially devised in kind. Springing up from the urban concrete, they noisily renounced the overblown and painstakingly placid rock product that relentlessly streamed from corporate radio of the day. 

Throwing off status quo bondage, they sifted through influences and admixed them with their own, newly coined rage. The fresh creature produced, turned out to reflect the same insouciant, rudely rebellious spirit previously voiced by Elvis, Jagger, et al.

Like the sounds Robert so loved -- embracing, as they did, jumping Rhythm and Blues and swinging Hillbilly Country -- he endured through flashy, annoying trends that had nothing to do with the bop that mattered to him. His music drew heavily from predecessors' patterns, but added serrated edges and interpreted them as forcibly high-spirited, in contemporary context.

Possessed of a deep baritone, he commanded both audience appreciation and, doubtless, peers' envy. A technically sublime vocalist, Robert easily located notes beyond limited fellows, sustaining them with rousing potency. His powerhouse pronouncements swelled with confident authority. 

The 1980s Rockabilly resurgence was, in considerable part, jump-started by Robert. He was and remains a top-most genre icon, of such impressive capacity as to merit mountaintop rank. 

Storied English guitar phenomenon Chris Spedding laced Robert's already outstanding offering with stylistically multifarious, sensitively nuanced six-string articulation. In his hands, songs could storm, fly, or cruise with settled serenity.

Chris cannily intercut Rockabilly, Blues, and Country enunciations with telescopically sliding Jazz chording and flabbergasting treble stings. One digs the instincts of a genuine artist, evident in every stroke.

Theirs was a remarkable, decades-long partnership that would take them to numerous recording studios and world stages. Legendary is their fuel-injected reinventing of roots-music treasures like "Red Hot," "The Way I Walk," "Rock Billy Boogie," and "Driving Wheel." They also granted new, bold being to "Hello Walls," "It's Now Or Never," "Stuck On You," "Look Who's Blue," and "Sweet Love On My Mind."

2022's Hellafied proved to be the duo's final studio collaboration. Cleopatra marketed it as both CD and blue/purple vinyl.




This was my contemporary assessment:

These tracks were put to tape in 1998 for a never-released album. Several songs did appear on Bear Family's The Lost Album Plus, issued that year.

Robert and Chris were decades beyond the need to prove themselves; the sound here is of men with much yet to offer. Material reveals a pair eager to trek beyond the confines of orthodox Rockabilly. That genre's swagger was retained, along with twangy flourishes, but set in a contemporary context.

Willingness to slip out of aesthetic constraint makes this release rewarding. As they are beyond probative burden, they are free to reap benefits from spirited arrangements.

Whether the steadily chugging "Have I the Right," the Country reclination in "Please Don't," stroller "I'll Make It Right," or the Bo Diddley-beat of "Don't Let Go," you're in the hands of masters. 

Over in the hot rod column, "Please Don't Touch," "Tell him No," and "Believe What You Say" barrel down roads like gassers. No cherry-topped cruiser has a prayer.

The energy level is so high as to seize listeners in paroxyms of happy fracture. The songcraft is solid, the execution masterful. One again marvels at the perfect pairing of Voice and Guitar. 

Robert's immense tone is richer and more sinewy than when he emerged. His presence is tremendous. And Chris flabbergasts, as always, with incomparable fretboard wizardry; he effortlessly blends airs and changes from the popular musics songbook. 

Together, the two were nonpareil.

"We were never a 50s act," Robert once told an interviewer. "We were always a contemporary band. It was never designed to be a retro act. We just played off that Rockabilly sound."

And, by the doing, created something of indispensable disposition. 


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FORMER staff writer for Rockabilly and Pin Up America magazines. FREELANCE credits include Daily Caller, American Thinker, Free Republic, Huffington Post, Counterpunch, Dissident Voice, Independent Political Report, USA Today, Des Moines Register, Iowa City Press-Citizen, Waterloo Courier, Cedar Falls Times, Marshalltown Times Republican, Cincinnati.com, IndyStar, Arizona Republic, No Depression, Goldmine, Blue Suede News, Rock and Rap Confidential, Crackerjack, Blues News, Wrecking Pit, Punk Globe, Prairie Sun, Music and Sound Output, BAM, New Music, and 1980s NYC fanzines Shake, Rattle, and Roll, Rebel Rouser, and Off the Wall. AUTHOR: Shake, Rattle and Rocket!, Ghost Saucers in the Sky!, Stratosphere Boogieman!, Flesh Made Music, That a Man Can Again Stand Up: American spirit vs, sedition during the incipient Trump Revolution, and Ideas Afoot: Political observations, social commentary, and media analyses. WORKED as 2004 Iowa coordinator for Ralph Nader independent presidential campaign; co-founded Iowa Green Party, also served as statewide media coordinator; press coordinator, 2002 Jay Robinson (Green) IA gubernatorial effort. Wrote extensively re Trump campaign..