Thursday, July 24, 2025
What I am Listening To: Sir Reg
Wednesday, July 23, 2025
Album Review- Franz Ferdinand- The Human Fear
Sunday, June 1, 2025
Concert Review- Rev Horton Heat
I wrote this in November 2024, just now getting to post it
I hang out at online music forums where people seem to go to a dozen (and often dozens) of concerts a year. I maybe make three or four but I also know there are two extremes and while I am not a frequent flier, I have probably seen more live performances than most people.
There are the limitations of time and money among other factors, and to say that’s something new would be false. They have always been there. In any case, the bands I have seen more than once number not much more than a handful- Social Distortion, Bad Religion, Bob Dylan, Nick Cave, Brian Setzer, Mighty Mighty Bosstones, Beck - possibly more but not many more.
At the top of the list by a mile is Reverend Horton Heat. I have seen the following opening acts for him - ska punk band Voodoo Glow Skulls, the rockabilly/psychobilly Bottletones, neotraditional country act BR-549, rockabilly/swing/punk band Amazing (Royal) Crowns, blues/outlaw country one man band Scott H Biram and Jerry Lee Lewis acolyte piano player Jason D Williams It’s a testament to where Horton Heat fits in that he can be dropped anywhere in the timeline to those Sam Phillips Sun Records days to the 90s/00s Epitaph/ Timebomb / Hellcat Records Warped Tour scene.
It also probably means that his “road warrior” schedule is so intense that there doesn’t seem to be a night he and band aren’t playing somewhere. That Road Warrior mindset might be why he got called out for complaining online during Covid but surely he had some opposition to not doing what he did night after night.
It also explains why the third from the last concert I saw was also Horton Heat. The last time I saw him he was touring the new at that time album (March 2023) Roots of the Rev (volume 1). He ostensibly is still touring that release in 2024 he released a single that pairs him with Jason D Williams and Dale Watson.
Heat has had Williams opening for him on this tour, and the night before the show I saw, the two had just played at the legendary Surf Ballroom- sight of the last concert of Buddy Holly, Richie Valens and the Big Bopper. (There is also a live from Houston album released in August 2023 that is technically the newest album. As a RYM reviewer writes- it’s from a 2009 performance opening for Motörhead. Released by Cleopatra Records which means it will likely be repackaged and re-released repeatedly and they have a reputation for dubious quality. This particular album doesn’t sound bad but it certainly isn’t an outstanding piece either).
So Heat is still touring the Roots of the Rev Vol. 1. He says there is a new album coming in 2025. Three songs get played off the new album including Twenty Flight Rock- the song that introduced longtime bassist Jimbo Wallace to Heat and promoter him to replace the previous band member when Heat heard Jimbo played it. Heat and Jimbo have been together for 30 years now and their playful fighting/banter is a lot of the enjoyment of seeing Heat - Jane’s Addiction and Garth Brooks serial killer conspiracy jokes along the way. It’s a real testament that Heat has so much banter and though it was only last year I saw them -didn’t feel repetitive.
They did “Rockin Bones” and talked about their relationship with early regional rockabilly star Ronnie Dawson as well as Willie Nelson’s “Three Days”. Not on the Roots album, the band closed the night as they have at least in recent years with a cover of Motörhead’s “Ace of Spades”
Heat's setlist has been pretty static with the setlist a “Best Of “. What it tells you is how long a career Heat has and how he’s managed to really put together an amazing set of singles. His first seven albums are represented here spanning from his buzzworthy Sub Pop albums to the Swing revival to the speedy punk sounds of 2000s Spend A Night in the Box and 2002s Lucky Seven. He then skips the two mid 2000s albums to play off his two more recent albums for punk label Victory- 2014s Rev and 2018s Whole New Life.
So, no deep cuts but a nice primer and reminder of a strong 30+ recorded career. Musically though, Heat shreds on guitar. The Motörhead influence comes out live. Jimbo’s standup bass is always a thing to behold. The banter with crowd and each other is fantastic too. He’s been doing it awhile (almost 40 years now) but are seemingly better every time out.
Setlist: Big Sky/Big Little Baby Five-O Ford Let Me Teach You How to Eat Three Days Psychobilly Freakout Big Red Rocket of Love Twenty Flight Rock Jimbo Song In Your Wildest Dreams It's Martini Time Whole New Life 400 Bucks Galaxy 500
Encore: Rockin Bones Bales of Cocaine Ace of Spades
Saturday, May 31, 2025
Album Review- Swami John Reis- Time To Let You Down
Friday, May 30, 2025
Album Review- Laether Strip- Fucking Perfect
Thursday, May 29, 2025
Album Review: Caleb Caudle- Sweet Critters
Wednesday, May 28, 2025
RIP David Johansen
Monday, May 26, 2025
Book Review: Too Much Too Young: The 2 Tone Records Story: Rude Boys, Racism and the Soundtrack of a Generation by Daniel Rachel
RIP Marianne Faithfull
Sunday, May 25, 2025
RIP Brian James
Saturday, May 24, 2025
RIP Rick Buckler
Friday, May 23, 2025
What I am Listening to- Danbert Nobacon and the Axis of Dissent
Thursday, May 22, 2025
Concert Review: Jason D Williams
I wrote this in November 2024, just now getting to post it
Like a lot of outstanding artist, I remember the first time I heard Jason D Williams.
It was on the Sirius XM Outlaw Country channel probably circa 2015 or 2016. I was interested right away. There really is no way of discussing Williams without bringing up the fact that he claims to be the illegitimate son of Jerry Lee Lewis and his career is in the style of the Killer. It's hard to be sure how serious this claim is. I found a 2014 article that calls him the son outright. The most likely story from Williams (if it is not a complete fabrication) anyway is that he had DNA tests with Lewis in the 90s but the results were inclusive and taken before technology could say more certainly.
It's a nice nod that this opens the door both to the possibility of that truth or that Williams is telling tales. (He would have been conceived around the time of “High School Confidential” if you are taking notes) More easy to verify, Williams got his start as a teen playing for Sleepy LaBeef- a Sun Records recording artist whose career seems a bit of blueprint for Williams- a “human jukebox” known for his energetic live performances.
Info on Williams isn't very convenient on the internet. He has no Wikipedia, for example. His first record was on MCA- 1990s Tore Up- seems to not be on streaming services but generally available through second hand resources and looks to be in line with what one would expect for a Nashville industry packaging of Lewis, largely produced by Roy Dea ( Tom T Hall, Gary Stewart).
It is also near this time where Williams (or at least his hands) star in the Lewis biopic Great Balls of Fire. 1993s Wild album was recorded in Sun Studios and put out by Sun Records. Produced by Dea and Classic country producer Shelby Singleton (“Harper Valley PTA”, LeRoy Dykes, Ray Stevens, Jerry Lee Lewis's Country Songs for City Folks). The cover looks more in line with finding a college rockabilly audience and looks like we are starting to anticipate Outlaw Country. Check out a rocking cover of “Tubular Bells”.
The next release is 2004's Don't Get None on Ya. It barely registers anywhere online but this Rockabilly Records release leads to another album for the label- 2010s Killer Instinct produced by roots rocker Todd Snider. This is likely the high point of his career to date - followed by 2014s Hillbillies and Holy Rollers produced by Dale Watson - these are hidden gems for fans of anything that resembles “Outlaw Country”.
His last album Lucky Ol Son was released in 2023 but media attention seems scant.
In 2024, he is opening for Reverend Horton Heat and releasing a single with Heat and Texas Country legend Dale Watson.
It's hard to describe Williams but Allmusic's James Allen may do it best in his review for Killer Instinct. You can't call Williams an “outsider” musician (and I know “outsider” music fans clutch their pearls the tightest) but he seems to embody the uniqueness of the original Sun Records legends in a way that cannot be overstated.It probably doesn't hurt that age helps the legend-Williams now 65 looks like he stepped out of a Hollywood movie about himself. Accolades that follow him like “the world's best piano player” are plausible. He's an amazing entertainer. Of course, there's the Lewis homages of playing piano from all types of directions- on top, behind and so on. But that is only half of the story. There's a bit of Tom Waits to him too.
He does “Whole Lot of Shakln'” of course but he also throws in Hava Nagila, Blister in the Sun and the Waterboys' “Has Anyone Around Here Seen Hank” (which in a certain tall tale claims to have cowrote) among the mix of the usual boogie woogie, old school country and 50s rock.
I doubt most of what he says on stage- so while he says his band is his son and grandson- it seems to be these players credited on his website- drummer Popcorn Irving and guitarist Max Kaplan who rock with the fury of X or Social Distortion .
I doubt I am doing a decent job of selling Jason. “Jerry Lee Lewis” show which almost sounds like a lame Vegas act and I am not sure his recorded work reflects the energy he has when he is in front of a crowd. But he ranks alongside other Wild Men of Rock like Mojo Nixon and is one of those characters that are impossible to pin down to a traditional genre.
Think of hard to categorize artists like Webb Wilder, Junior Brown, Chuck Mead, and Big Sandy. Bill Kirchen of Commander Cody is one of the comparisons that pops up a lot in reviews too. But he's a fun time and if he comes by, go see him