City Blogs: Music Blog

December 26, 2007 at 8:04am

MUSIC REVIEW: Handsome Jack

Recommend Blog Post
Total Recommendations (0)

In the whole retro-rooted world I come from, wallow in, gravitate to, and preach about, there are degrees of ragged energy that grab me before a band's talent or music does. I've always admired moxie and out-and-out-balls over proficiency. You can learn to be good - to a certain extent - but you can't study up on wild 'n' loose; either you is or you ain't. That's not to say that a thumbs-up from me means you're no good, you're no good, you're no good, baby you're no good... It's just that I love a big splash of wrong and raw along with the right and well done.

And just when I think I'll never see a band rock a stage with a classic nod and a contemporary irreverence - oh, say for example like The Supersuckers, New Bomb Turks, Nashville Pussy, Jack Black, Tenderloin, or The Hellacopters - a band like Buffalo's Handsome Jack comes into my life. Tuesday night on the Bug Jar stage, this band was cocky, arrogant, and brash, twisting the blues with gritty guitar and howling vocals. Handsome Jack is young, and weren't even an impure thought in their daddies' minds when long-haired rock initially took its white monkey wrench to black blues. The guitar shook me (yup, had to put a Zeppelin reference in here after sneaking in the Ronstadt). You could cut the bravado with a knife as one chica next to me lustfully eyeballed the stage, pointing directly at the bass player as he played in mid-gunfighter stance.

"I want him," she said.

There wasn't a dry seat in the house... or an un-ringing ear.

The sold-out crowd (lots of leather and lots of stripper heels) at Water Street Music Hall got righteously zombified Friday night at the feet of head-banging cinema auteur Rob Zombie. It was a first-rate rock spectacle with video monitors, projections, and a fairly intense light show - Zombie's favorite colors are apparently red and blue. It was at least 10 times better than I thought it was gonna be. The band was tight. Show highlights included a cool half-take on Metallica's "Enter Sandman" and of course the White Zombie rocker "Thunder Kiss 65," which grooved deep despite the band playing it entirely too fast. Assorted Rob Zombie movie clips accompanied the show and really drew together where Zombie comes from, what it sounds like, and what it looks like. The guy rocked his ass off, bounding around the stage like a pinball. He strikes me as genuinely into what he does and I found it a kinda funny to see the tour buses outside shrink-wrapped with adds for his upcoming DVD release. A real Zombie in Hollywood... cool.

Comments for "MUSIC REVIEW: Handsome Jack" (0)

City Newspaper is not responsible for the content of these reviews. City Newspaper reserves the right to remove reviews at their discretion.

No comments have been posted. Be the first and add one below.

Leave A Comment

(This will not be published)

(Optional)

Respond on Your Blog

If you have a City Account you can not only post comments, but you can also respond to articles in your own City Blog. It's just another way to make your voice heard.


Recent Comments

Darren said:

I'm not sure if this is "tongue in cheek", but let's assume so (I'm referring to the "No Wave"...

about MUSIC REVIEW: The Jet Black Berries, Filo Beddoe

sarah said:

That drums bass band was amazing!!!!!!!!!!!

about CONCERT REVIEW: Helen Money, Hank and Cupcakes at Boulder

Roger Levy said:

I love Lee Konitz. A cousin of my mother passed away some years ago and left a huge record...

about CONCERT REVIEW: Lee Konitz at Kilbourn Hall

AMY LANG aka The Bone Yard Band Wife said:

If you are interested in learning more about Bone Yard, please visit their Myspace page at:...

about CONCERT REVIEW: The Cult, Boneyard at Main Street Armory

Pam Spallacci said:

"The sound was tall and wide and infinitely deep, as if it had no beginning and no end. The band...

about MUSIC REVIEW: Tranquilatwist, The Lustre Kings