ALABAMA THUNDERPUSSY
Staring at the Divine (Relapse)
Reviewed by Jason
Thornberry
Upon gazing at the cover, I considered the
possibility that Alabama themselves had gotten
back together and unearthed a follow-up to 1993's
Cheap Seats. I opened the cd booklet to see an
unshaven horde gazing at me from a moonlit
thicket, as if to ask, "Whathefuck are
you doing in our woods anyway, city
boy?"
No, this doesn't appear to be Jeff Cook, Teddy
Gentry and friends, and instead of a
well-rehearsed Tennessee River they're equipped
with songs called Whore Adore, Beck and Call
(which isn't actually about Beck), and Amounts
That Count (not a James Brown cover either).
Alabama Thunderpussy are from Richmond, Virginia,
where there is an apparent shortage of razor
blades. Whenever I see a chap with a beard I
almost instantly assume that it smells like what
he last ate. So, for some peculiar reason, while
Johnny Throckmorton is singing, I'm imagining a
plate of steaming chili. I probably think too
much.
I'll also suggest that you not do the same when
listening to this. Worrying about whether or not
A.T. are in the right century, much less the
correct decade, will keep you from reaping any of
the benefits of Staring at the Divine.
Instrumentally this is really quite
interesting-almost like Trouble with Kathleen
Hannah's younger brother on vocals. Throckmorton
apparently has a bad taste in his mouth, and his
lyrics frequently do an elongated turn at the end
of each phrase, just like hers.
Plenty of points tacked on for the guitars, and
Alabama Thuderpussy's obvious sense of humor too.
The last time I heard this many cool, weird,
memorable riffs was on Time Does Not Heal (1989)
by Dark Angel, which was so stuffed with
carpal-tunnel fretwork that I found myself
head-banging one morning and unintentionally put
my forehead through my brother's teeth. This
album is a bit too deliberate for such displays
of affection.
Ted Nugent joins the Black Heart Procession
onstage for a medley of Release My Heart, Motor
City Madhouse, A Boy With No Tongue, and Cat
Scratch Fever. The only five guys who saw that
show are in this band, and, aside from the
missing trumpet and accordion, this is pretty
exact.
GRADE: B.
© 2002 - Jason Thornberry