CD Review: Misfits – Dead Alive
Misfits Records
All Access Review: C
Misfits - Dead Alive 2013 |
The fiends are getting restless, as ominous thunderstorm
sound effects rumble in the distance, signaling in a not-so-subtle way that
evil, in the form of horror-punks the Misfits, this way comes.
Led by founding
member Jerry Only and his “devil’s lock,” with Dez Cadena on guitar and Eric “Chupacabra”
Arce on drums, the Misfits – Glenn Danzig nowhere to be found, having split
from the band in the mid-1980s amid much legal wrangling – crawl and slither
out onstage to regale hardcore hooting and whistling followers with B-movie-inspired tales of monsters, murderers and other things that go bump in
the night.
Only it’s almost impossible to discern just what’s happening
in a good chuck of their latest concert album Dead Alive because Only’s bass is turned up to ludicrously loud
levels, overloading the Misfits’ circuits and creating these formless, muddled sonic
black holes that practically swallow whatever malevolent chords and notes are supposed
to be hemorrhaging from their amps. Dead
Alive culls spirited performances from the Misfits’ Halloween night 2011
show at B.B. King’s in Times Square in New York City and their Oct. 30, 2011
gig at the Starland Ballroom in Sayreville, N.J., and their brutality has never
been more delightfully injurious, from their punishing rhythmic mayhem to Only’s strong, broad-shouldered vocals. But the egregious sound problems muffles their roar, obscuring Cadena’s guitar
work, dulling the hooks of “Death Ray,” mucking up an otherwise rambunctious “Shining”
and reducing the song structure of a riotous, fast-paced “American Psycho” to complete
and utter ruin.
Okay, punk is messy. It’s not meant to be well-scrubbed and
clean-sounding, and the Misfits play with the kind of raw, reckless abandon, violence
and frenzied energy hoped for from these old, intractable punks on an explosive
version of “Vivid Red” and the brawling, bludgeoning opener “The Devil’s Rain,”
from the 2011 album of the same name. Threatening to go thermonuclear the rest
of the way, Only counts off “1, 2, 3” as the Misfits launch into a blistering “Land
of the Dead,” but it’s here where the mix starts to go awry, the virus
spreading to straight-line revivals of “Curse of the Mummy’s Hand” and “Cold in
Hell” – continuing, by the way, a run of seven straight songs off The Devil’s Rain – where Arce’s straightforward
drum bashing gets completely out of hand and loses all sense of timing. It’s
like he’s hitting his cymbals with a lead pipe, which would be punk as hell
were it not for Dead Alive’s obvious
faults.
Opinions vary wildly as to the merits of the The Devil’s Rain LP, the Misfits’ first
studio album in ages. Many who pine for Danzig’s return have, for the most part,
written off this incarnation of the band, while the Only backers seem generally
pleased, if not overly excited, about it. There is reason for optimism, though,
as the Misfits close Dead Alive in celebratory
fashion, gaining a tighter rein on a hook-laden, riff-mongering “Helena” that
hits hard and explodes, before the bruising, greaser ‘50s
rock ‘n’ roll nostalgia of “Science Fiction/Double Feature” and “Saturday
Night” lights up the night.
The world needs the Misfits and their ghoulish fun, and Only deserves kudos not
only for his improved singing, but also for keeping the band going, even if
some aren’t entirely sure of their direction. (misfitsrecords.com)
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Peter Lindblad