These guys play rock & roll like Vince Lombardi coached football: heavy emphasis on basics with a strain of demented violence to keep the opposition intimidated. The closest musical analogy is the Who, who have always sounded like the inmates of Bedlam on their best stuff. Cheap Trick not only sounds like their attendant forgot to lock their cages, they look like it, too. Half the fun of the album is staring at the pictures on the back and wondering if lead guitarist Rick Nielson really has fire ants in his underwear, and how Boris Karloff mated Henry Kissinger with Adolf Hitler to come up with drummer Bun E. Carlos.
he's ever worked with, plays one very mean Stratocaster. He has a good ear for a riff, a lack of qualms about beating it to death when the occasion demands, and the technical competence to mess around when tedium threatens. What vocalist Robin Zander lacks in range, he more than makes up in emotion: check out the singing on "Taxman, Mr. Thief," and tell me anyone has been more pissed off since John Lennon was primaled. Tom Peterss on plays bass so inventively that the instrument is almost a second lead. On a spectrum from Charlie Watts mantra rhythm to Keith Moon chaos, Carlos stands slightly closer to Wattssomeone has to keep the band from falling entirely into the Void.
Their lyrics run the gamut of lust, confusion and misogyny, growing out of rejection and antiauthoritarian sentiments about schoolall with an element of wit that has distinguished the best bands since rock began. Standout songs, to my ears, are "Elo Kiddies," "Speak Now or Forever Hold Your Peace" and the aforementioned "Taxman." Catch them before Nurse Ratched slices open their frontal lobes. (RS 238)
CHARLES M. YOUNG
The full-strength return of the original Fleetwood Mac -- the late-'60s British blues gods who made roughneck-pub mayhem out of the Elmore James and Jimmy Reed songbooks -- would have been a comeback worth celebrating. "The Dance" is just the Lindsey Buckingham-Stevie Nicks lineup serving microwaved "Rumours." For a live album, "The Dance" runs on low heat, as if the Mac were content to merely revisit the hits rather than truly reinhabit them -- and risk going deeper into the emotional dysfunction that inspired the songs. And there are no fresh kicks in the four new originals, certainly none that beat Buckingham's extremely caffeinated rereading of 1987's "Big Love." More than 25 million of you already own copies of "Rumours," "Tusk" and "Tango in the Night." Think hard: Do you need this?
You may figure you don't need "Cheap Trick," either, especially if you're still steamed about those power-ballad records the band made in the '80s. But give this one time and volume; you'll come to love it. The title and black-and-white cover evoke the napalm-in-stereo glories of the original "Cheap Trick" album, the group's 1976 debut. Yet the dark heart and barbed-guitar snag of this "Cheap Trick" sneak up on you: the white-knuckle creep of "You Let a Lotta People Do