The latest studio album by Austin's favourite guitar and drum duo, The Ghost Wolves. "A fistful of dark, rustic magic," Classic Rock Magazine enthuses, "a furious bellow of maximum swamp boogie with blood in its teeth and lust in its heart." For fans of Joan Jett, R.L. Burnside, The Ramones, The Kills, Ronnie Dawson.
C**Z
Here Comes The Fuzz
Texas power duo, Jonny and Carley Wolf, kick plenty of ass on their sophomore album. There's all the fuzz, scuzz, face-melting fuck-youness, of debut 'Man, Woman, Beast', and then some more. Think garage; think primal; think riot grrrl; think White Stripes-meets-Jon Spencer Blues Explosion in a gonzoid blues blender, operated by a cackling Iggy. Thin The Kills; but with better vocals.Things kick off with a short, George Gallowayesque, rant; via Soviet Russia!! Bonkers, or what? 'Attitude Problem' gives it 'the finger' straight off; all punky, shouty, no-nonsense. Third track, 'Strychnine In My Lemonade', ramps up the dirty guitar riffs; catchy chorus, and a super vocal from Ms Wolf. They let out their inner-Sabbath for 'Noisy Neighbours/Yuppy Scum', before things go a bit pear-shaped, with the somewhat join-the-dots scuzziness of 'Crybabies' - although the pounding drums just about rescue it from snoozeville. Fortunately, next track - 'Whettin My Knife' - ups the ante, with a stomping stormer.'Bunny Run' has some nice piano touches, and a driving r'n'r riff; a real treat. 'Hill Country Howl' is one of three, very short, 'soundscapes' - in this case, some howling mutts. Then its onto the percussive 'All The Good's Gone'; crystal-clear vocals, allied to minimalistic instruments; the same feel carries over into 'Triple Full Moon', before it really 'wigs out' with a few screams, plus a great big dirty riff. So far, so great; they really know how to shake 'it' up to alleviate boredom setting in.'Journey On' has some punktastic drumming, dive-bombing guitar licks, plus another superb vocal. The fuzz&scuzz quotient really kicks in on 'Vroom Vroom' - all stoner riffs, and a Siouxsie Sue-type workout from Carley; intense. 'I Got Money' is a bit nowheresville, whilst the T.Rexy 'Trippin' has some nice metal fuzzbox, but teeters on the edge of 'meh'. Have they run out of creative steam? Well, no; the ultra electro-bluesy 'Shouldn't Have Lied' changes gear downwards, and kicks the interest factor back into play; some great drumming here. Then we're onto the home straight with the punky, glammy, stomper of 'Valley Of The Wolves', before it comes to a close with the downbeat, lo-fi, folky 'DYGKD'.So; seventeen tracks over forty minutes, most of which throw some great genre-switching shapes. There's a touch of filler - rent-a-scuzz licks - but mostly The Ghost Wolves turn in a hugely entertaining, raw, vibrant, in-yer-face, slab of wonderfulness. One of my favourite records from 2017, it's well-worth buying.
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