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Rocket Redux

Rocket from the Tombs

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Album Review

Three decades after their formation and 28 years after their initial demise, the members of Cleveland proto-punk band Rocket From the Tombs defied odds by regrouping for an exhilarating June 2003 tour. An outgrowth of those magical gigs, Rocket Redux is designed to capture the forceful set list from those shows in the studio, with the help of Television's Richard Lloyd. Alongside original Rocket vocalist David Thomas (who went on to form the iconic Pere Ubu), bassist Craig Bell, and guitarist Cheetah Chrome (later of the Dead Boys), Lloyd — who produces, records, and mixes — plays guitar for the late Peter Laughner, while Ubu drummer Steve Mehlman works the kit for this fiery 12-song disc. In the face of the crude demos and bootlegs that have been the only RFTT recordings to surface until now, it's a thrill to hear the raw, furious blast of "Frustration" loud and clear as it unfolds into the damn near soulful strains of "So Cold." If "What Love Is" is a testament to Chrome and Lloyd's guitar acrobatics or Thomas' captivating growl, Mehlman and Bell's Led Zeppelin-like stomp locates depth in these guttural anthems. Songs made famous after RFTT split into competitive camps, like "Sonic Reducer," "Final Solution," "Life Stinks," and "Ain't It Fun," get reborn here. And when Thomas inquisitively barks, "Ain't it fun when you get so high, you can't come?" it's practically 1975 all over again. These underground punk legends may all be well into their fifties, but there's no absence of energy on this edgy, discordant, and very necessary set. Come to think of it, most bands half their age would kill for the same kind of hustle and undying spirit. ~ John D. Luerssen, Rovi

Customer Reviews

pasty cheese and llama knees


mo money mo money
lick up my honey
My brains in the sink
and my veins got a kink

baby in a high chair
who put em up there
mama dada
zingowallbana

Joseph aint the same no more
his dog is a cat and the cat made him poor

johnny aint the kind o guy ti bring you to dinner then cook you in a pie
he's more of the man to put you in a can and leave in lynn till tomarrow

we all have dead friends and ne'er made amends
lost on a tractor in oklahoma

yogurt in my daddy's ear
i'll kill my emotions and wont shed a tear

you see my dear polly
my mother's gone missin
now unzip me sweatpants
and on you i'll go pissin

climbin to the top o me mornin
should a list'nd to the ape who give warnin'

heroin made my brother die
now eatin berries while i cry

i got rhymes on my tongue and in my veins i got ink
i'll cut my wrists and i'll make you think

johnny be good
johnny be bad
no loves me
but a brillo pad

Rocket Return

Not nearly as ferocious and raw sounding as "The Day The Earth Met..." but an ok record besides that.
would have been better if some other songs were included

Biography

Formed: Cleveland, OH

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '70s, '00s, '10s

Not to be confused with San Diego-based alt rockers Rocket from the Crypt, Rocket from the Tombs was a mid-'70s Cleveland un-punk outfit best-known as the band that split into two better-known Cleveland punk bands, Pere Ubu and the Dead Boys. Rocket was formed by a reporter for the weekly Cleveland entertainment newspaper The Scene who went by the name of Crocus Behemoth. A portly man with a mound of wild hair, Behemoth had the perfect name, and a reputation as a wild, completely unpredictable stage...
Full Bio
Rocket Redux, Rocket from the Tombs
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Customer Ratings

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