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Local H

Here Comes the Zoo

RS: 3.5of 5 Stars Average User Rating: 4.5of 5 Stars

2002

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Back in Aerosmith's heyday, there was no whining allowed in rock & roll. Local H -- a Midwestern duo who hold Rocks sacred -- are in complete agreement on their fourth album, Here Comes the Zoo. So on "Half-Life," when Scott Lucas yelps, "You're born with nothing, better make it enough," Brian St. Clair, who recently replaced Joe Daniels, tramples any hint of self-pity with a drum barrage special-delivered from Led Zeppelin's Physical Graffiti. Unlike Local H's fine 1998 release,Pack Up the Cats, there is no overarching concept to muddle the my-fist, your-face enjoyment. Guitars hacksaw their way through a wall of kick-drum dementia, even as Lucas delivers the kind of smart lyrics that don't call attention to just how smart-alecky they really are. Two stoned-immaculate epics -- "Baby Wants to Tame Me" and "What Would You Have Me Do?" -- provide a respite from the hammering, forging a connection between "Stranglehold"-era Ted Nugent and Queens of the Stone Age, whose Josh Homme makes a cameo. Local H may not necessarily be the future of rock, but in 2002, they may best embody what rock once meant.

GREG KOT
(RS 892 - March 28, 2002)



(Posted: Feb 28, 2002)

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