(LP + MP3) The
received wisdom (at least in America) goes that punk rock was invented in New
York by the Ramones, who reconfigured midwestern hard groove rock and 60s
garage singles, into a formula that defined punk: short, fast, catchy, and
unstoppable. But in some weird parallel universe, punk might have traced its
roots to Rocket From The Tombs, a Cleveland band that lasted less than eight
months (1974-75), and never made a studio recording. In those eight months
they wrote songs that would become punk anthems: "Ain't It Fun,"
"Sonic Reducer," "Final Solution," "30 Seconds Over
Tokyo," "Amphetamine." And they played them like there was no
tomorrow. The band blew apart in July 1975. One faction went on to create the
avant-garage rock group Pere Ubu, the other, punk stalwarts The Dead Boys.
Now, after 37 years they have finally recorded a a studio album with Barfly,
delivering a sound that's not dated, or restricted to any passing fad or
marketing infatuation, these men are ugly, old, and have not mellowed in any
conceivable way. They've devoted their lives to raging against the
boundaries, and they have been willing to pay the price. Includes free
digital download card.
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