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VARIOUS Artists
The United Kingdom of Punk
--Lisa Weeks
THE ELEMENT 79
Dig Out!
ANYONE REMEMBER THE over-saturated '80s retro-garage band market that included a few shiny nuggets like the Fuzztones, Miracle Workers, the Chesterfield Kings and Gravedigger Five? Well, the Element 79 sure does. These Denver garage revivalists, like their cave-stomping brethren, take the bulk of their influence from scuzzy '60s basement-hatched bastards like the Sonics, Wailers, Standells and Count Five. The Element 79 are a fuzz-bustin', treble-propelled trio that carves its way through eight tasty tenderloins of trashy-blues punk damage on Dig Out! Wrap-around sunglasses, black turtlenecks and vintage Rickenbacker guitars top off this respectful and complimentary packaging of six-oh injected swagger. Beginning with the ominous surf garage instrumental, "The Creeper," which kicks off this brief eight-song slab of wax, The Element 79 produces one savage Neanderthal whomp for such a sparsely attended three-piece stag party. "Mystreat Me" and "Five Years Behind"--a backhanded tribute to the primal thump of the Haunted's "Five Years Ahead of My Time"--both clobber you over the noggin with hooks-filled, club-heavy blows. Og say: You buy now. Ugh. --Ron Bally
VARIOUS ARTISTS
STEEL RAILS: Classic Railroad Songs, Vol. 1
A RIBBON OF steel courses through American music, crossing over genres; folk, blues, bluegrass, jazz, country and rock alike have ridden it, producing a huge body of music unlike that of any other nation. KXCI disk jockey Michael Hyatt has been collecting railroad music for years, and in this two-CD set he offers some of his favorites, from well-known tunes like A.P. Carter's "Wabash Cannonball," here performed by Roy Acuff, to a roster of wonderful but perhaps less famous songs: Guy Clark's "Texas, 1947," the Delmore Brothers' "Pan American Boogie," Mary McCaslin's "Last Cannonball." Every cut is a standout, but a few songs are definitive--Ervin Rouse's "Orange Blossom Special," Herman Parker's "Mystery Train" (in an obscure version by rockabilly master Sleepy LaBeef), Tom Russell's "Lord of the Rails," and Jimmy Rodger's "Waiting for a Train," the last, Hyatt opines, the best railroad song ever written. This collection--and more volumes are in the works--will delight rail buffs and roots-music fans alike. --Gregory McNamee
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