Album Reviews
Watt's sign-off to his liner notes of Ballot Result "I love you d. boon, forever" is the one mournful note on a farewell album that is anything but sad. The heart of this thirty-one-song album is the nearly three full sides recorded for Atlanta and Los Angeles radio stations. The trio charges through ferocious versions of Minutemen classics and sloppy but endearing covers. And for poignancy's sake, nothing tops this version of their autobiographical "History Lesson Part Two," sung by an unusually serene Boon.
Ballot Result was originally planned as part of a triple-LP set, Three Dudes, Six Sides, Half Studio, Half Live, that was to consist of newly recorded live versions of songs voted as favorites by the band's fans. When Boon's death scrapped those plans, Watt scoured for versions of those songs. The kitchen-sink nature of Ballot Result hasn't made for an album destined for compact disc. Yet from the ramshackle 1980 practice tapes to Boon's volatile solo version of a song against U.S. involvement in Central America, "No! No! No! To Draft and War," recorded five years later, Ballot Result is a striking audio vérité history of a band that died too soon.
Boon's ghost looms over Ragin', Full-On and not merely owing to Watt's dedication of "this and all future fiREHOSE records ... to d. boon." When the trio Watt, Hurley and new frontman Ed Crawford start pummeling their instruments with odd jazz-funk-rock punctuation, you may think you're hearing Minutemen outtakes. The titles alone of Watt's witty new songs ("Under the Influence of Meat Puppets," "Another Theory Shot to Shit") recall Minutemen raveups like "Political Song for Michael Jackson to Sing" and "Do You Want New Wave (or Do You Want the Truth)?"
But Ragin' surveys enough new territory to qualify Firehose as its own group, whether it's with punchy power-chord rockers, skittery funk or the disarmingly gentle closer, "Things Could Turn Around." Granted, foisting all the vocal responsibilities onto twenty-four-year-old Crawford has its drawbacks. When his guitar playing isn't recalling Boon, Crawford's voice recalls Michael Stipe, especially on the lumpy folk rock of "The Candle and the Flame" and "Choose Any Memory." Yet, as Crawford intones earnestly, "So difficult, we care enough to try." There's no need to explain the very existence of Ragin', Full-On is more than any of us had expected.
(Posted: May 21, 1987)
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- Little Man With A Gun In His Hand
- Political Song for Michael Jackson to Sing
- I Felt Like a Gringo
- Jesus and Tequila
- Courage
- King of the Hill
- Bermuda
- No One
- Mr. Robots Holy Orders
- Ack Ack Ack
- History Lesson, Pt. 2
- This Ain't No Picnic
- Cheerleaders
- Time
- Cut
- Split Red
- Sh*t You Hear at Parties
- Hell [Second Take]
- Tour-Spiel
- Take Our Test
- Punchline
- Search
- Bob Dylan Wrote Propaganda Songs
- Badges
- Tension
- If Reagan Played Disco
- No! No! No! To Draft and War/Joe Mccarthy's Ghost
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