JASON AND THE
SCORCHERS:
HEAT OF THE NIGHT
By Mike Boehm, Los Angeles Times
September 14, 1995, Thursday, Orange County Edition
Copyright 1995 The Times Mirror Company
Jason
and the Scorchers haven't lost their knack for turning hard-luck stories
into raucous, blazing fun, nor have they relinquished the claim they
staked a decade ago as the hardest-rocking twang band on Earth.
But neither has the quartet from Nashville shaken its own hard-luck
story, judging from the scant turnout of about 100 Scorcher loyalists
Tuesday night at the Galaxy Concert Theatre.
During their first go-round, from 1983 to 1989, the Scorchers put out
a series of EPs and albums, two of which, "Fervor" and "Lost
& Found," rank with the decade's best off-the-mainstream rock
'n' roll. At their brief but incandescent best in '84-85, the Scorchers
melded Hank Williams to AC/DC with a blowtorch, succeeding in maintaining
the lyricism and poetry of country and folk tradition while rocking
almost ridiculously hard.
Predictably, they failed to find a home on country-allergic college
radio, and the Nashville mainstream no doubt regarded these noisy local
boys as if they were a plague of locusts.
Now the original lineup, which reformed in 1993, is back with "A
Blazing Grace," an album that partly recaptures the faded glory
of a decade ago. A 75-minute Scorching of the Galaxy showed that the
years haven't taken the spirited physicality and go-for-it rawness out
of the band's live show.
Front man Jason Ringenberg was folksy and full of smiles, treating the
tiny turnout as a cup half-full (or, more precisely, one-sixth full)
rather than half-empty. If he couldn't regard Orange County fondly (he
noted jokingly that he might inject a little more anger into his vocals
than usual, because his ex-mother-in-law lives here), he and deeply
drawling guitarist Warner Hodges certainly showed a fond regard for
their small contingent of local fans.
They rewarded the loyalists with a show that harked back to the Scorchers'
winningly chaotic heyday. Hodges, dressed in tight black jeans and boots
with dangerous-looking spurs, took the role of guitar-slinger literally
with a patented move: He slung his instrument around his right thigh,
over his left shoulder, and back into playing position as if he were
twirling a baton.
In peak moments, Ringenberg could be seen stomping about the stage in
his cowboy hat, using his microphone cord as a lariat or a jump-rope
and generally acting like a square-dancer who has gotten it into his
head to veer off into a one-man car chase.
The encore found him jumping into the audience to sing and blow harmonica
while stomping along the horseshoe arc of one of the Galaxy's tier-front
railings -- a notable feat of daring and agility.
The elfin drummer, Perry Baggs, bashed mightily (a tad too mightily
on a couple of mid-set ballads) and added high harmonies while bassist
Jeff Johnson thumped away calmly. Hodges, an embodiment of scruffy cool,
may have set back the anti-smoking movement by doing his best Keith
Richards imitation, chomping a cigarette in one corner of his mouth
while singing harmonies out of the other.
Along with the visual feast came a rewarding musical program that featured
both storming, metal-strength rock and twangy country balladry (Hodges
is one of the few guitarists who on the one hand could fit in playing
slash and burn licks with Motorhead or, on the other, fall in with sensitive
fills behind Merle Haggard or George Jones).
Ringenberg struck a plaintive, sweetly lamenting note during the ballad
segment with "Pray for Me Mama (I'm a Gypsy Now)" and barked
his way through a steam-rolling take on the John Denver nugget "Take
Me Home, Country Roads." With the shifting dynamics of "Broken
Whiskey Glass" (still the band's signature song) and the anthem
"Harvest Moon," Jason and the Scorchers had it both ways,
the country lyricism along with the revved-up raucousness.
©
1995-2001 The
Times Mirror Company
All Rights Reserved