THE
RACKETEERS - Mad for the Racket (Muscle Tone)
Looks like I lose the bet, Craig. This is here, and "Deep Reduction
2" still ain't. Put it on my tab, okay?
Accuse
me of revisionism if you will...back in March, when I caught Mad for the Racket
at SXSW, I was less than optimally stoked with their performance. Coupla months
later, in a "16 Forever" column, I was making more conciliatory noises.
Maybe I judged it too harshly, that kinda thang. And now, the real, no-shit,
American release (remixed, or so it seems, from the preliminary run that was
out on Track in the U.K. last year), I gotta say, this is a pretty good Wayne
Kramer rekkid (even if it's really more than half a Brian James rekkid), and
on his own label, to boot.
Firstly, I need to correct some inaccuracies in my earlier screed. For one thing,
all of these compositions (save "I Fall," scribed by James solo) are
James-Kramer collaborations. The two co-leaders swap off lead vocals, with Brian
taking seven to Bro. Wayne's five. Although ex-Police man Stewart Copeland gets
higher billing, it's Blondie's workmanlike stickman Clem Burke who pulls the
bulk of the drum duties here, and he kicks 'em GOOD, too (better than Chris
Vrenna did onstage at SXSW, IMO). Brock Avery takes Mr. Burke's place on a coupla
cuts, providing the same kinda free-jazzy percussives he did on Wayne's adventurous
'96-'97 works (including "Dodge Main," the Deviants ixvi's "Eating
Jello with a Heated Fork," and John Sinclair's "Full Circle"
as well as "Dangerous Madness" and "Citizen Wayne" - the
last two, along with the rest of Wayne's worthy Epitaph oeuvre, slated for re-release
on Muscle Tone).
Make no mistake about it, kids - this is A ROCK'N'ROLL RECORD (even though "Czar
of Poisonville" dips into Bro. Wayne's bag of voodoo spoken word tricks)
with a big, cinematic sound (like "Citizen Wayne" but with more, uh,
ACCESSIBLE material). Bro. Wayne earns big points as producer on this outing
for the drums that crack like rifle fire and layers of churning guitars you
could get lost in. They rage and storm away like the seasoned veterans of the
rock'n'roll wars they are. No cookie-cutter punkisms here, nor idiot metal funk.
These guys are an anachronism, perhaps, but a glorious one.
I still don't see Brian James as being in the same league as Wayne (although
he does pretty well for himself on "Trouble Bones" and "Tell
A Lie")...but the disparity isn't as pronounced as it was, say, between
Johnny Thunders and Wayne in Gang War (send me hate mail through the link at
the bottom, JT fans), or between Dr. Tek and the Stump Wizards guys in Deep
Reduction. All five of the toons Wayne sings woulda sounded good on any of his
Epitaph recs. My fave remains "Christiana," his lovesong to the CNN
war correspondent, but then again, I've always been a sucker for women in khaki.
It's interesting that this is his first album since resurfacing with "The
Hard Stuff" in '95 that makes no reference to his illustrious history.
Proof positive that his present day work stands up without it, I think. (That
said, it'll be nice to see those Epitaph discs back in circulation, not to mention
the Air Raid and further MC5 goodies that Alive/Total Energy should be
laying on us in the next year.)
In a just world, this would be heard and appreciated by a generation of kids
who grew up on the noise that these guys spawned (after all, they seem to have
caught on the "The Essential Radio Birdman" in a big way...who woulda
thunk it?). Realistically, one hopes it'll at least find its way to all of us
crusty old bastards who still dig the hard stuff.-
Ken Shimamoto
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