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Monday, November 19, 2018

As Diabatz
Nightmares In Red
(Drunkabilly Records)




In a chilling twilit existence where novel detours spring open beneath like unanticipated trapdoors, rest faith in the dead-set doctrinal beat; it will guide through this odyssey fantastique.

Recommended: "Nightmares In Red," "You Go On," "Sucri Song," "Treat You Mean," "Death Lurks On the Race Track"

Video: "Nightmares In Red"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e4MwMznsMao&list=PLTLePriSwc3dmTq6e3oZNEhrUnhz6Ykvr


https://www.facebook.com/asdiabatz/


http://www.drunkabilly.com/mailorder/product.asp?idproduct=4676









Babe Miller
The 10 Tears of...
(Sleazy Records)



Sitting alone in one dim corner of a rundown tavern that's been around for generations is a guy nursing his one millionth beer and seeking a few hours' solace from heartaches. He can tell you Detroit's Babe Miller is American country music like it was and still can be: Jumped up in some moments, bitterly reflective or even despairing, in others.

Country music means a lot to that guy. It means a lot, period.

Babe even recalls the man who pledged to paint any car, any color, for $29.95.

Recommended: "1200 Building," "Happy Hour," "Pink Pink Elephants," "Candles and Wine," "My New Guitar," "Earl Scheib"

Video: "1200 Building"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UL3C_h68ibk


http://www.babemiller.com/

https://www.facebook.com/babemillercountry/


https://sleazyrecords.com/en/sleazy-records/12925-the-10-tears-of-8436022626027.html









Kryptonix
La 6eme Symphonie 
(Klabautermann Records)



Somehow, somewhere, beneath a hull of harshness that storms into monstrous eves good souls know not, lurks an affinity for melodic allure. Its hooks plunge first in ears, then in wrecking bones' deepest centralities.

Recommended: "Leather Face," "Just Give It," "House of the Sun," "Sin City," "La 6eme Symphonie," "Synthetik Love," "Marche ou creve," "Very Bad Trip"

Video: "Leather Face"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sw2BUU1bYI4&t=0s&list=PLrDULAag8HmE8MDlH-2w2PW4DFfNg6fg2&index=3


https://www.facebook.com/Kryptonix-officiel-381582375228882/



https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/kryptonix

https://www.amazon.com/6e%CC%80me-Symphonie-Explicit-Kryptonix/dp/B07JJZZDSD/ref=sr_1_cc_1?s=aps&ie=UTF8&qid=1542349556&sr=1-1-catcorr&keywords=kryptonix





Los Injectors
Rock Apocalypto (self)




Scraped off a downtown sidewalk at 3AM, slapped into furious delirium, and charged with life-threatening toxins. Hurtling upward into tumultuous Reverend Horton Heat/Motorhead ethers. Amplifiers are go.

Recommended: "Raise Some Hell," "Hot Lap," "Rock and Roll, Motherfucker," "Summer Wind," "Bad News," "Rev It On Up"

Video: "Raise Some Hell"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5LfT9Df64Fw


https://www.facebook.com/LosInjectors/

https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/losinjectors#




Saturday, November 17, 2018

Kenyon Lockry
Honky Tonk Noir (self)



I can't imagine anyone more capably turning the wild side of life into an audio-cinematic turn, exploring with first-hand witness its temptations, sorrows, and head-back howls. Nor can more fittingly Americana-grounded accompanists for such an ambitious endeavor be found than this number that includes Dave Roe, Chris Scruggs, and Kenny Vaughn.

Recommended: "Honky Tonk Honey," "Five Feet of Lovin'," "Touch of Red," "I'll Show Me," "Nighthawk," "Turn the Hurt Up," "Honky Tonk Noir"

Video: "Five Feet of Lovin'"
https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/kenyonlockry4


https://www.facebook.com/kenyon.lockry

https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/kenyonlockry4


https://www.amazon.com/Honky-Tonk-Noir-Kenyon-Lockry/dp/B07JKK7G9F/ref=sr_1_1?s=music&ie=UTF8&qid=1542345587&sr=8-1&keywords=kenyon+lockry




Nathaniel Hintz
If You Break My Heart (self)
Single




What initially seems a Halloween lark, given its brisk, spooky arrangement, has an underlying somberness novelty never nears. The combined effect intrigues.


Audio: 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CBbcn6V15fU


https://www.facebook.com/straycboy/


https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/nathanielhintz2#







Screaming Lord Sutch
Jack the Ripper (Decca)
7 inch




The 2 Burr Bailey cuts feature Ritchie Blackmore and are fine, economical outings with easeful melodies and placid crooning. But it's Lord Sutch that is the main attraction.

At the 1964 moment the Beatles were yeah-yeah-yeahing all over Ed Sullivan, Londoner David Edward Sutch was prowling in swirling cloak and horrific greasepaint as Jack the Ripper. His rock 'n' roll horrorshow costumery and theatrics scandalized sedate Britishers and sent chills down the spines of toe-tapping fans, but also proved influential. 

As Dangerous Minds noted in a profile, Sutch was "an early pioneer of shock rock, garage rock, and psychobilly, who mixed monster movie aesthetics with rock 'n' roll long before Alice Cooper and the Cramps came along."

According to his Wikipedia page, "During the 1960s, Sutch was known for his horror-themed stage show, dressing as Jack the Ripper, pre-dating the shock-rock antics of Alice Cooper. Accompanied by his band the Savages, he started by coming out of a black coffin...Other props included knives and daggers, skulls, and 'bodies.'"

Dangerous Minds: "Sutch appeared to have done most of pop's rebellious things (long hair, the wildest songs, act, etc) but never received the credit for any of it."

Of his two songs here, ghastly original "Jack the Ripper" is probably most identified with him. But his recreation of Huey Smith's "Don't You Just Know It" bounces at convivial pace and is a lighthearted amusement well worth indulgence as well as repeat enjoyments.

Many musicians later renowned on their own passed through Sutch's band, through the years. Included in that league are Blackmore, Keith Moon, Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck, Nicky Hopkins, and Charlie Watts.

Sutch was by his own admission not a particularly gifted singer. But his enthusiasm was undeniable, his knack for shocking presentation manifest, and his seat in the Pantheon assured. His songs have over the decades assumed ghoulish, revered status, having been covered by bands like the Sharks, Gruesomes, and
White Stripes. 

Recommended:
"Jack the Ripper," "Don't You Just Know It"

Video: "Jack the Ripper"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=16&v=c2ZsWENob1s

https://www.crazyloverecords.de/news/5006/screaming-lord-sutch-jack-the-ripper-7-ep-ltd.












Voodoo Swing
Nervous Wreck (chromodyne)




Don't ever let anyone tell you that affability can't swing with smooth coolness, or clean muscle make more efficacious determination's invigorating deploy.

Recommended: "I Don't Hate You," "Linda Lee," "The Cleaner"

Video: "I Don't Hate You"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PKkfVX1nQSU

https://www.voodooswing.org/

https://www.facebook.com/voodooswing/

http://www.chromodyne.com/



https://www.amazon.com/Nervous-Wreck-Voodoo-Swing/dp/B07148XQWM

https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/nervous-wreck-ep/1236511382



Friday, November 16, 2018

On Friday, President Trump awarded the Medal of Freedom to "American icon" Elvis Presley, among others. Given that, and as the 2018 Democrat Party is following Hillary Clinton's intolerant example, I've updated the below 2016 essay.





Hillary vs Elvis 2016
Did Clinton believe Presley to have been a "deplorable?"





Singer Mary J. Blige's musical successes were commercial and era-bound in nature; she neither turned new creative soil nor was particularly interesting in her revisiting of cliches.

She did, though, slur her artistic superior. In 1997, Blige lied bold-facedly about the late Elvis Presley, deriding him without foundation as "racist."

In 2016, the otherwise irrelevant Blige was a minor player in political news. She made quite the loud spectacle of herself on behalf of Hillary Clinton. 





In a simply tilted video interview spot that ran online, Blige sang questions to Clinton. The candidate wore a pained, 'why in the hell did I agree to this?' expression, the same one she sported during her earlier Between Two Ferns appearance. 

My guess: Some millennial vote-hunting campaign functionary was later disciplined roundly.

But Hillary's opportunistic embrace of Elvis-hater Blige neatly illustrated a larger reality about her campaign, as well as of a foul and nonsensical cultural trend. In that addled movement, everything established, successful, reasonable, and traditional was to be reviled and plowed under. 

No distinction was recognized between positives and negatives. By virtue of vintage, all were considered equally opprobrious. 

To have enjoyed previous cultural cache, went the fury-brained half-thinking, was to be (pick one or more) racist, sexist, xenophobic, homophobic, etc. And, hence, the despised enemy to be strangled by the streets-milling, sign-hefting forces of goodness.

In the undisciplined era of anarchic tumult, Hillary Clinton made manifest her sympathy: Out with the old, and in with the new. Elvis was counted as an 'irredeemable deplorable,' by her rancid arithmetic. 

Given her amoral calculating, it was logical -- albeit still thoroughly despicable -- that Clinton cast her lot with rampaging, violent, and destructive street thugs over law officers representing decent and orderly American society. 

At this point, a stipulation cries out to be acknowledged. No candidate can reasonably be assumed to share every belief of their backers. 

A major misjudgment was made by news media commentators challenging Donald Trump to publicly distance himself from stray unsavory supporters. Such outsiders had without invitation sought greater visibility by attaching themselves to his more popular and spotlighted effort.

It was unreasonable to demand that Trump acknowledge them as legitimately worth attention. But as seen in the 2016 election season, reasonableness was most clearly not a mainstream media ambition.

There was a considerable difference between that and the Hillary/Blige case: The Democratic candidate chose her association with the Elvis-smearing singer of long-since-gone renown.

Hillary did not necessarily share Blige's deceitful, noxious prejudice. But by uncritically availing herself of the faded pop luminary's aid and comfort -- and, in a very real larger sense, with the bedraggled, anarchic assassins of all-that-came-before -- she certainly posited this metaphorical choice:

You could stand with either Elvis Presley or Hillary Clinton. Couldn't be both.


end

Saturday, November 10, 2018

The Devil's Daughters
Revelations 
(Devil's Daughters Records)




That this features Danny B. Harvey, alone, makes it attention worthy. But additional merit arrives in abundance via by far the most silkily sonorous throats heard in ages.

Recommended: "Pass That Bottle," "Blue Moon of Kentucky," "These Boots Are Made For Walkin'," "Whole Lotta Love"

Video: "Pass That Bottle"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wqi3CSGJnds


https://www.facebook.com/TheDevilsDaughters/


https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/thedevilsdaughters2

https://www.amazon.com/Revelations-Devils-Daughters/dp/B07J24NVKP

https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/revelations-ep/1438376704







Ruzz Guitar's Blues Revue
The Heist (Rhythm Bomb)



Airtight carousing blues of infectious soul. Every man jack present an imperial crown perpetrator. Sweet brass sweeps, dips, and caroms. Ruzz dominates with fretboard gymnastics that flabbergast as they titillate.

To quote the Treniers: "It rocks! It rolls! It swings! It jumps! Man, it really moves!"

Recommended: "The Heist," "Back Home To Stay," "Juke Joint Shakedown," "Mine All Mine," "I Used To Love You," "High Stakes Hustle"

Video: 52:07 live in Visual Radio Arts studio, including "The Heist," "Juke Joint Shakedown"
https://vimeo.com/294296862


https://www.thebluesrevue.com/

https://www.facebook.com/thebluesrevue/


http://www.rhythmbomb.com/ruzz-guitars-blues-revue-the-heist/




500 Miles to Memphis
Blessed Are the Damned (self)





Guitars crunch madly, spurred to high gallop by the same splendidly indomitable beat that's always propelled rock'n'roll. And robust vocals make fine topping for sometimes Celtic-informed "Americana Punk" disregardful of genre -distinctions and bound to splinter every refinement so unwise as to stand in protest.

Recommended "The River," "Bonnie," "Hold On Tight," "No Doubt About It," "In My Chest," "Save Me," "I'm a Bastard"

Video "Bonnie" (live)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8YfDLQCnLxQ


https://www.500mtm.com/

https://www.facebook.com/500milestomemphis/


https://500milestomemphis.bandcamp.com/album/blessed-be-the-damned





The Rebellion
We Know What We Want (self)




Somewhere, someone may think melody and the unstoppable beat can't be lovingly preserved in just four sinewy cuts that compel eruption. They are wrong.

Recommended: "I Know What I Want," "Goodbye Josephine," "Oil and Gasoline"

Video: "I Know What I Want"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QsfxkjsPDls

https://www.facebook.com/rebellionjoensuu/


https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/therebellion2



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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..