eMusic Review 0
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 »