JEFFREY MORGAN’S MEDIA BLACKOUT #959.593.227!
Comic Book Heroes – Take A Seat (self released) :: I was gonna say something suitably
snide like: “If real superheroes were as lame as these four Supersnipes, the world would be run by supervillains.”
But it turns out I’m only half wrong because, just like the Hawk, they got enough Whoish power chord trappings to wake
me up. Unfortunately, just like the Dove, they also got enough Hagarish power ballad trimmings to snooze me down.
North Side Kings – Suburban Royalty (I Scream) :: These
screamos write liner notes that brag: “This is the song Ice-T wishes he wrote in place of ‘New Jack Hustler’.”
Yeah, right.
Ice-T – Home Invasion (Rhyme
Syndicate) :: And this is the album the North Side Kings wish they’d made in place of Suburban Royalty. Yeah,
right on.
Fear Nuttin Band – Yardcore (Bodog)
:: Jahve nuttin d’feah bwah dis Korny wrekord widjil leeve fuh evva indie infuhmmy, mon.
The Notwist – The Devil, You & Me (Domino) :: Love their way, they’re the
new Psychedelic Furs!
Bad Luck Charms – Bad Luck
Charms (I Scream) :: I scream, you scream, we all scream for this slovenly hard rock cross between the New York Dolls
and Wild Man Fischer.
Keaton Simons – Can You Hear
Me (CBS) :: You’re breaking up.
Neil Sedaka –
Breaking Up Is Hard To Do (Rocket) :: Can you hear me now?
Your
Vegas – A Town And Two Cities (Universal Republic) :: It was the best of Hall & Oates, it was
the worst of U2.
PSEUDO-SIZZLING PLATTER OF THE WEEK: John Oates
– 100 Miles Of Life (Phunk Shui) :: Strangely believe it, this one sounds a whole lot like DaBo’s Young
Americans, which ain’t no insult by a long shot when you consider that it’s got a similar trifecta of breathy
pseudo-soul lead vocals, smooth pseudo-soul background vocals, and slinky pseudo-soul strings—the only difference being
that the erstwhile Mr. Jones never slipped into gritty pseudo-stud David Lee Roth vocal mode from time to time like pseudo-soul
Oates does here.
Be seeing you!