Head (Remaster / Reissue)

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Head (Remaster / Reissue) album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 33:18

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Joe Gross

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Joe Gross hails from Falls Church, VA, one of the Chocolate City's most vanilla suburbs. He has written for Spin, Rolling Stone, the Village Voice, the Washingt...more »

10.05.09
The Jesus Lizard gaining their stride in what would be a lesser band's career apex
Label: Touch And Go

For Jesus Lizard fans of a certain severely underground persuasion, this is the band's best album, a noise-rock classic cut before the Lizard had refined their sound into the juggernaut displayed on Goat and Liar. These folks are wrong, but they have a point. All the pistons are firing here. Duane Denison has nailed the Zep+rockabilly+noise equation he would keep refining for the life of the band. Bassist David Wm. Sims is better recorded that on the band's debut EP Pure and his parts thrum all the harder for it. And drummer Mac McNeilly is a revelation, underground rock's answer to John Bonham's heavy-handed swing. Overall, one fantastic rhythm section.

As for Yow, well, it's hard to think of a singer who better represented the chaos of a mind under duress. Song after song, Yow gives the impression of hearing the thoughts of the truly demented (or at least really, really drunk) in real time; his voice has a you-are-there quality that can't be taught or is rarely accidentally discovered.

"One Evening" opens the record in a classic Lizard rush — Sims and Mac in lockstep, Denison's guitar almost a color element until it establishes the main riff and Yow's muffled bellowing… read more »

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The highest tops,the deepest depths.

bebert1914

One of those albums I have listened to thousands times.For me, the first four tracks are one of the most beautiful and intense passage in all rock'n'roll music history.Had seen them playing live at Maxwells in May of 1991.The best ,most intense,most pleasant rock concert I've seen in my life;the track.Pastoral played live was what we could call happiness.

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They Say All Music Guide

With McNeilly in to provide a little more human swing to the proceedings — appropriate given Denison’s own jazz-madness tendencies — the Jesus Lizard fully launched themselves on an unsuspecting world with Head. The brutal, bass-heavy slam of the music, testament to the uncredited engineering/producing abilities of Steve Albini, gives the whole record a punch that most indie rock didn’t have at the time, looking ahead to where similarly minded groups like Helmet (also produced by Albini) would end up soon enough. The McNeilly/Sims rhythm dictates the songs, letting Denison and Yow both find their own way over the chugging brusqueness as they see fit. Yow for the most part sounds like he’s singing through a wall or through a huge amount of cotton gauze, making his lyrical tales of violence, twisted living, and the like one for lyric-sheet readers to work out, but the amped-up roars and leers evident in his vocals do a fine job on their own. Then again, the song titles aren’t exactly ones to suggest flowers and roses, as “My Own Urine,” “Waxeater,” and the perfectly creepy “If You Had Lips” make rather clear. Yow’s Birthday Party worship is now one more readily shared by the band with McNeilly’s presence, the fusion of dark blues and proto-punk rampage — “My Own Urine,” in fact, being a good example of just that — let to run loose. The stentorian stomp of “7 vs. 8″ and the stabbing attack of “Good Thing” in particular might as well be early Cave on the vocals, Yow in mad-preacher mode in excelsis. There’s a definite weird playful touch all the band’s own, though, whether it’s in the sassy strut that starts “If You Had Lips” or even, on the start of “Pastoral,” a bit of chiming guitar prettiness. – Ned Raggett

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