Gun-Shy – The Screaming Blue Messiahs
If you don’t tap your foot along to this one, you must have a wooden leg that’s nailed to the floor.
Foggy did me the honour of saying that he picked this because he thought I might like it, so there’s a bit of pressure there. He needn’t have worried because he was right, I absolutely loved it. So, I’m going to heap the pressure back on myself by confidently predicting that this will be sitting inside the top 10 this time next week, and I suspect that JJ Cale will be looking nervously over his shoulder.
I wouldn’t say that there’s much country on offer here, plenty of blues and rockabilly shot through with punk, but importantly for me, just the right amount of punk. The bass and drums on offer here are superb, not so much giving the album it’s trademark
boom-chick-a-boom sound, more like
boom-chick-a-BOOM!!! I must admit I nearly fell of my chair when Goater described it as tinny!
I’ve said before that I don’t like straight-up blues or country albums, even though I like both genres. I like it more when somebody defies the conventions of those genres and approaches them from a different angle. Even though there’s a Hank Williams cover on this album, you’d do well to point at any song on here and dismiss it as “just another country song”.
Listening to this album, I’m surprised that Foggy didn’t enjoy my Yawpers selection more, because there are similarities although some of The Yawpers songs raised their roots rock and country flag a lot higher.
On “Wild Blue Yonder”, Bill Carter sounds a lot like Mike Peters of The Alarm, which is a compliment as far as I’m concerned. Pretty simple lyrics but “Dance to the moonshine / Dance to the gun” and “Country air is the only air that’s fit to breathe” set the tone nicely.
The bass and buzzing rhythm guitar combination that propels “Holiday Head” is fantastic.
“Smash the Market” is the weakest track because nothing much happens and the chorus is too repetitive.
"Let's Go Down To The Woods" – One of the best tracks on the album, that slinky bass and guitar combination is superb throughout this one, I love the chorus and the fast-fingered guitar just before the outro is mesmeric.
The bass and drums that introduce "Twin Cadillac Valentine" are electric, and the rockabilly feel is strong on "President Kennedy's Mile". I agree with some others who have picked out "Clear View" as one of the standouts - fabulous guitar to start off this adrenaline-fuelled shuffle.
The thing I love about this album is that even on the tracks that don’t jump out at you, there’s always something going on with the dynamics of the drums, bass or guitar, or even just the lyrics, that makes each song highly listenable. “Just For Fun” could have been a bit tedious but I just love the lyrics: “Looking down the barrel of a gun just to see where the bullets come from,” and although he’s getting a bit too shouty on "Someone To Talk To", the booming rhythm makes it a good listen.
“You’re Gonna Change” is a country cover, but apart from the occasional yodel, you wouldn’t know it. Bill Carter
definitely sounds like Mike Peters here.
A lot of members on this thread talk enthusiastically about bass on a lot of the music we review. I’m generally more focused on the guitars (and mandolins and banjos) and organs (and accordions) but I think the bass and drums on this album are fantastic. They give the album a bottom end that’s really chunky and satisfying.
Now for that ZZ Top comparison I mentioned in a comment earlier. After years of standard Texas boogie (nothing wrong with that), ZZ Top got a shot in the arm with their synth and guitar fusion that propelled them into the stratosphere with their 1980s albums
Eliminator and
Afterburner. I don’t think there’s any synth on
Gun-Shy, but the overall effect they’ve achieved on some of these tracks is similar to that of ZZ Top’s 80s sound – it’ slick without loosing the earthiness of the overall sound. A neat trick if you can pull it off and on this album they certainly do.
This is a fantastic pick,
@FogBlueInSanFran, so thanks for the nomination. It gets a little too shouty here and there, there’s a cover version, but it’s not short of being the perfect album –
9/10.