Showing posts with label The Plimsouls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Plimsouls. Show all posts

Sunday, February 5, 2017

The Plimsouls "Resouled" at Bowery Electric, New York , NY 2/3/2017

I've been a fan of The Plimsouls since I first heard "Zero Hour" in the classic 80's comedy The Last American Virgin. Not too long after that I saw Valley Girl, which not only had three of their songs but the band itself playing "live" in a club scene. This was when was a preteen, sometime in the mid/late 1980's. The original band broke up in 1984, but reformed (unbeknonst to me at the time) in the mid/late 90's. And I managed to miss them when they toured yet again in the mid 2000's.



This time The Plimsouls have been reformed (or "Resouled", if you will) by lead guitarist Eddie Munoz with a new backing band. Original Lead singer and rhythm guitarist Peter Case and bassist Dave Pahoa are not in the current line-up (original drummer Lou Ramirez hasn't been part of the band since their initial break-up). The new members, whose names I do not know, were all fine and well and they replaced the absent-member's parts admirably. However, anytime a band replacs such important members like the lead singer, who wrote all the lyrics, etc. with new band members, I feel like I'm giving points for effort when I'm not only watching the band's performance but reviewing their set/performance.

The Plimsouls "Resouled" are a fine cover band that also happens to feature a member of the band they're playing tribute to on lead guitar. They played all the classic Plimsouls songs; "Now", "Zero Hour", "Hush, Hush", "I'll Get Lucky", "Lost Time",  "Oldest Story In The World" and the band's biggest hit "A Million Miles Away". I love these songs, so it was nice hearing them all in alive context. The Plimsouls - the original band proper - have always had a reputation as a great live band. After all, the band have as many live albums as they do studio albums.

I'm glad I (finally) got to see "The Plimsouls Resouled", but I really hope I do get to see The Plimsouls reform one day and see
Peter Case sing these songs he wrote with the band he wrote them for.

Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Goo Goo Dolls: Hold Me Up (Metal Blade/Fun After All/1990)



Goo Goo Dolls are most famous for their hits "Name", "Iris" and "Slide". However, several years before all of these name-making hits, the band were a ratty, bratty, thrashy punk band. They'd first released Goo Goo Dolls (Mercenary/1987) and Jed (Metal Blade/1989), but really hit their stride on their third album, the first to be distributed by Warner Brothers, Hold Me Up. It was on this album that guitarist Johnny Rzeznik (aka Johnny Goo), sings lead on four (and co-lead on "Hey") of the songs on the album. Bassist Robby Takac (aka Robby Goo) was the lead lead singer on the band's first two albums (okay, Johnny sang two of the songs on Jed), however, Johnny undeniably assumed the role of front man/lead singer by the time of the band's fifth album (and multiple-platinum release) A Boy Named Goo. 


I first discovered this band in late 1990 with the video/single for "There You Are" on MTV's 120 Minutes. I saw the band live before I'd heard the album, and was completely blown-away. The album did not disappoint when I did in fact hear it. The influence of The Replacements, Cheap Trick, Hüsker Dü and The Ramones are evident throughout the album. The singles, "There You Are" and "Just The Way You Are" are highlights. The two covers (Prince's "I Could Never Take The Place Of Your Man" and The Plimsouls' "A Million Miles Away") are exceptionally rocking. Takac is responsible for a few of the albums' exceptional tracks; the intense Ramonesesque opener "Laughing", the amphetamine-rockabilly of "Out Of The Red" and minor-key-yet-optimistic "So Outta Line". The stalker song "Hey" could be a contender for best song on the album. The instrumental "Kevin's Song" is oddly the album's centerpiece and is kind of wonderful. The mid-tempo "You Know What I Mean" and the acoustic (the bands first acoustic song, a taste of the future) "Two Days In February" both appeared on the Freddy's Dead: The Final Nightmare soundtrack- as did the non-album single "I'm Awake Now".


If you think you know the Goo Goo Dolls and haven't heard this (or their early work), I highly suggest giving it a serious listen. It still holds up (no pun intended) as a great pop/punk album.
Great, tight playing and very fine material. Also Superstar Car Wash (the album that followed Hold Me Up) is definitely work a listen.

Here's the video review:



Special thanks to: Stephen Gersztoff.