Altamont
by DeadSun
Perhaps the name Altamont isn't
ringing any bells. How about Dale Crover? If the answer is still
an emphatic 'no', then I am officially discouraged. Final clue: The
Melvins. If the answer is still 'no', then I openly encourage you to
take poison.
Altamont is an outfit comprised of Dale
Crover (ex-Melvins, ex-Nirvana), Dan Southwick, Joey Osbourne, Sasha Popovich,
and Tashi Kasai. This rowdy quintet's latest effort, The Monkees' Uncle,
features Crover not behind the drum kit, but rather at the helm of six
strings and a pick. With a Rock and Roll heart at its center, The Monkees'
Uncle is a humor heavy, fuzzed-out cast of the recent swell in the
tide of the so-called garage revival--- only this particular train is being
conducted by a sludge rock legend, who was waist deep in lo-fi experimentation
well before its newfound appreciation took the indie universe by storm.
Overall, the attack is face first. The
Monkee's Uncle, for the most part, sports a hard rock skin, and at
many points during the music, whirs with an enjoyable tenor of down-swing,
boogie sleaze. Tracks "Frank Bank", "Bathroom Creep", and "Pedigree" aptly
demonstrate this approach. In keeping with Dale Crover's modus operandi,
the prevailing undertone of the recording is frequently tinged with sonic
psychedelia.
"Dum Dum Fever", the third track, is a
strong cut, with its skeleton straight out of the proto-metal play book.
A dirty but crisp dirge paves the way for a interesting bit of stringy
tremolo. "Look at the monkey, watch him dance, see him fall right on
his ass."--- so croons Dale Crover, leading the song into a Sabbath-esque
take down. "El Stupido" takes the fourth slot, and sits in the pit of one's
gut as a guilty pleasure of sorts, largely due to its perverse, upbeat
pop bouncing. The change moves into a collection of vocal phrasings which
are eerily reminiscent of the late Andrew Wood (Mother Love Bone), but
Crover pulls it off nicely.
The title track opens with lurid tales
of ingested teeth and bowel movements, eventually rearing the rest of itself
with a spurt of energy, lovingly glazed with ugly wheezes and guitar squelches,
a 1-2 knockout drum count, and a heady, first wave punk temperament. "The
Bloodening" boasts a decent slab of riffage that takes one back to the
late 80s hardcore sound--- however the guitars are (for one reason or another)
very subdued within the sound mix, and this takes a bit of potential steam
out of its delivery.
The occasional foray into stoney, bleeping
space electro-jams are average, if not mediocre--- more or less there for
effect, rather than to induce real sensory impact--- in "Laughing Boy"
and "Bull Ramus", for instance.
"Easter Sunday" is an utterly bottom-heavy,
stoner-doom crunch out. Complete with a decent acoustic opening (some might
call it an homage to early 70s Jimmy Page), the recording punches in, right
around 0:45, with the aforementioned nasty business. What sounds akin to
a wailing Hammond churns out chordal chaos in the background throughout,
and the shut down commences with the obligatory lapse into white noise,
Dale Crover style. The disc closes the show with a cover of The Screamers
"In a Better World"--- nicely executed, with proper attitude and gusto...
and a quirky but subtle organ track for good measure.
Overall, The Monkees' Uncle delivers
goods with an appropriate, hard Rock center--- but is also nuanced, sticky
with high end bristle, bottom crunch effects, and a coarse touch of ugly
white noise.
CD Info and Links
Altamont - The Monkees' Uncle
Label:AntAcidAudio
Rating:90 Points on the DeadSun
Scale
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