Richie Ramone
"Entitled" (DC-JAM)
CJ Ramone
Last Chance To Dance" (Fat Wreck Chords)
by
DC Larson
I first glimpsed the Ramones in a b/w cheap paper Rock Scene magazine photo essay. 1975. It chronicled the filming (in what I later learned was Arturo Vega's loft) of their pre-Sire video audition tape.
The music was jarringly monochromatic. So were they - stark in black leather before a draped bedsheet. 1-2-3-4, and the world was made a cool place for misfits, outsiders, and assorted irregular psyches.
Drummer/singer Richie and bassist/singer CJ would pass through the punk juggernaut in its later years -- Richie replacing Marky for three albums (Marky returned), and CJ taking up the bass after Dee Dee's 1989 departure.
The two never did appear together on a Ramones LP, but each added something distinctive to the group.
And they offer distinctly individual solo works. Therin lies the key to appreciating these new CDs. Not comparing their Ramones-consistent traits to the originals (a competition no one could win), but rather listening for what might distinguish them from their august predecessors.
Richie's Entitled tends to be the angrier and more aggressive. Its militant guitars are set on 11, Surly riffs stalk amongst the chunky power chording fury, and a rhythm section probably wanted by authorities for disrupting global peace rages ever forward.
Ah, the songs. Direct progressions are layered with intriguing melodic additives, and invigorating instrumental ambition jumps up from the chaos, only to duck back into shadows to plot new attacks.
Atop the whole is Richie himself, his unique sneered vocals alive with attention-riveting attitude. Loud. Defiant. Detonative. A whipsmart presence in black leather.
Back in the day, he penned several notable tracks for the Ramones proper. Three are reinterpreted here (closer to the author's own vision, one assumes).
Of these, "I Know Better Now" and "I'm Not Jesus" are in the familiar headlong-dive style. But they incorporate novel twists and
newly minted textures. ("I Know Better Now" benefits from a gang-yelled "Nobody can tell me!")
As the youngest Ramone, CJ brought a freshness and energy to their presentation. Last Chance For a Dance is welcome for the same reason. Its athletic energies speed through cut after cut of ebullient flame. Arrangements, even those tending toward the elementary, surprise with unexpected curb jumps into head-spinning change territory.
Keeping all percolating above the storm is an infectious optimism. Not as in happy-go-sappy, smiley faced obliviousness. But rather a lopsided grin-through-untoward experience that refuses to cede the battle.
As demanded by CJ's top-drawer original material, the playing here is uniformly strident and declarative. It surges, true, but with winning amiability, The pounding comes with a hearty handshake.
Variety is served with the inclusion of pensive balladeering, For these, CJ's otherwise muscular singing settles back into an agreeable introspectiveness.
My advice? Buy both.
Recommended Richie "Criminal," "Entitled," "Smash You," "I Know Better Now," "Into the Fire"
Recommended CJ "Understand Me," "Til the End," "Long Way To Go," "You Own Me," "Last Chance To Dance"
https://www.facebook.com/RichieRamoneOfficial
http;//www.richieramone.com
http://www.dcjamrecords.com
VIDEO "Entitled" http://youtu.be/_tVPTFb-G_c
https://www.facebook.com/OfficialCjRamone
http://www.cjramone.com
http://www.fatwreck.com
VIDEO "Last Chance To Dance" http://youtu.be/REG75pFucRQ
Capsule reviews by a jury of one: Iowa journalist/author DC Larson. Rockabilly, Psychobilly, Blues, Alternative, Western Swing, R and B, Punk, Swing, Hillbilly, Glam, Americana. DC Larson's retro science fiction writing blog, from which the Eddie Atomic Space Adventures are available, is RETRO RIFF BOOKS. And his political writings one is AMERICAN SCENE MAGAZINE. Both are also on Blogspot. All original content on these three blogs is under author copyright.
Saturday, December 13, 2014
Wednesday, December 10, 2014
Restless
"Seconds Out..." (Bluelight)
by
DC Larson
UK neo-rockabillies loose 80s energies with vibrant style. Few were their equals back in the day: such remains the case. Clever songcraft, whipsaw dispatch, arresting vocal presence. Fresh expression with experience as concrete-solid foundation.
Recommended "Black Kane," "Abracadabea," "There I Was Gone," "She Used To Love Me,""She Was My
Baby, He Was My Friend," "I'm Going Home"
https;//www.facebook.com/bluelightrecords
VIDEO "Black Kane" http://youtu.be/vZwp7zj08Lk
"Seconds Out..." (Bluelight)
by
DC Larson
UK neo-rockabillies loose 80s energies with vibrant style. Few were their equals back in the day: such remains the case. Clever songcraft, whipsaw dispatch, arresting vocal presence. Fresh expression with experience as concrete-solid foundation.
Recommended "Black Kane," "Abracadabea," "There I Was Gone," "She Used To Love Me,""She Was My
Baby, He Was My Friend," "I'm Going Home"
https;//www.facebook.com/bluelightrecords
VIDEO "Black Kane" http://youtu.be/vZwp7zj08Lk
Clint Bradley
"Riding After Midnight" (Bluelight)
by
DC Larson
Gentle-voiced Clint knows well his way around winsome western airs of the sort that Marty Robbins rode to the trail's high end. And that he ambles good-naturedly, an occasional bounce in his giddy-up, allows the appropriately mainly acoustic players to stretch and interpret at hand-tooled leisure. A relaxful satisfaction.
Recommended "Riding After Midnight," "Six Strings," "Call of the Far Away Hills," "A Fine Horse," "We Are Shane," "My Rifle My Pony and Me"
http://www.clintbradley.co.uk
https://www.facebook.com/bluelightrecords
VIDEO "Riding After Midnight" http://youtu.be/mcyhLTezHWs
"Riding After Midnight" (Bluelight)
by
DC Larson
Gentle-voiced Clint knows well his way around winsome western airs of the sort that Marty Robbins rode to the trail's high end. And that he ambles good-naturedly, an occasional bounce in his giddy-up, allows the appropriately mainly acoustic players to stretch and interpret at hand-tooled leisure. A relaxful satisfaction.
Recommended "Riding After Midnight," "Six Strings," "Call of the Far Away Hills," "A Fine Horse," "We Are Shane," "My Rifle My Pony and Me"
http://www.clintbradley.co.uk
https://www.facebook.com/bluelightrecords
VIDEO "Riding After Midnight" http://youtu.be/mcyhLTezHWs
Brian Setzer
"Rockabilly Riot! All Originals!" (Surfdog)
by
DC Larson
Some thirty years since the Stray Cats declared themselves "Runaway Boys," and still the wildest party in town rages on. His twangy Gretsch unholstered, host Brian raises his voice in bacchanalliac ebullience while the rest of us -- veterans and initiates, alike -- hoist our sudsy glasses in celebration of relevance everlasting.
Recommended "Let's Shake," "Lemme Slide," "Rockabilly Blues,"
"Vinyl Records," "Stiletto Cool," "Blue Lights, Big City"
http://www.briansetzer.com
http://www.surfdog.com
VIDEO "Let's Shake" http://youtu.be/xQaSBw_LEtM
"Rockabilly Riot! All Originals!" (Surfdog)
by
DC Larson
Some thirty years since the Stray Cats declared themselves "Runaway Boys," and still the wildest party in town rages on. His twangy Gretsch unholstered, host Brian raises his voice in bacchanalliac ebullience while the rest of us -- veterans and initiates, alike -- hoist our sudsy glasses in celebration of relevance everlasting.
Recommended "Let's Shake," "Lemme Slide," "Rockabilly Blues,"
"Vinyl Records," "Stiletto Cool," "Blue Lights, Big City"
http://www.briansetzer.com
http://www.surfdog.com
VIDEO "Let's Shake" http://youtu.be/xQaSBw_LEtM