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From:
FYD
March 3
The Last
L.A. Explosion
It's a crime, I know, that
I'd never heard them until now. But, see, that's always been
something that Bomp's done really well. Re-introducing stuff
when the timing's ripe and the collective ear's ready to appreciate
it again.
Formed in 1976 and fueled at
the inception by mid 60's garage and psych, the Last ended up
taking these sounds and combining them with the first gurgles
of US and UK punk which was just hitting the shelves. It makes
a pretty vivid collage. Kind of like if Chad and Jeremy had formed
Sham '69.
I mean, I always liked bands
like the Vipers and other garage rock revivalists, but there
was always that foppish "let's play dress up" element
to their work. They'd craft neat originals that sounded dated,
but they didn't add anything to it, and it was all some weird
costume. Like when you buy brand new furniture that's been roughed
up and chipped to look distressed and antique. Why do that?
This stuff? This is alive,
original and listening to it's kind of like playing dodgeball,
because a bunch of stuff is going to get thrown at you and you
never quite know when it's coming. Dig the juxtaposition of "This
Kind of Feeling," a beautiful, British-explosion-y strummer
with it's "oh-woe"s and unrequited love, and "Bombing
of London," with its opener that's somewhere between "Rock
and Roll High School" and a battlefield fife and drum, and
then it folds into the interplay of lead singer call and snotty
chorus response on alternating lyrics, and it sounds like an
out take from "That first album by that one UK punk band
in the 70's." And even then, it breaks down in the middle
to do a Japanese "nee nee nee nee nee nee neeeeee nee nee"
thing. Complete with gong. Crazy.
This album has so much to give.
"Walk Like Me"'s pretty much as punk as you were going
to get back then. The pace is quick, the vocals are crumpled
into a straight growl that gets louder every chorus. Even then,
they sneak a recurring bit of guitar sunshine that sounds wonderfully
out of place. "Slave Driver"'s similar in its attitude,
but the frantic joy of the keyboards really lifts it off the
ground and helps it transcend the usual. Then, two seconds later?
You're in "Every Summer Day" which is totally Jan and
Dean with its "I wanna go back to when the world was free...Southern
California 1963." What's going on here?! (And then, back
again. That song, when released as a single, was backed with
the polar opposite, "Hitler's Brother," included here
as a bonus track.)
"I Don't Wanna Be In Love"
rips. That's the only word for it. And it pre-figures sounds
later made by bands like the Urinals where it's the guitar and
the chorus going dowwwwwwwwn dowwwn down after every shout. Also
includes a spooky stab at "Be-Bop-A-Lula," which, according
to singer/guitarist Joe Nolte, was inspired by John Cale's version
of "Heartbreak Hotel."
This re-issue has some great
liner notes by Nolte. An interesting essay on the album's creation
that really helps contextualize it. Apparently, these guys used
to open for folks like the Dils and Black Flag, and I bet that
was pretty wild because, with a lot of these songs, you can really
hear how they'd fit those gigs once freed from their studio cages.
Yeah. I'd a liked to see that.
Re-issue includes original
single and compilation tracks. Fans of British invasion, garage
punk, or 70s UK punk'll find a lot to love here. There's even
talk of a new album, which would be really cool. Check them
out.
(JM)
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