After the huge disappointment of Thickskin, my expectations for the
new Skid Row album were muted to say the very least. Back in the band's
heyday of the late 80's and early 90's, you'd never hear me saying anything
bad about this band. Oh my, how things change. As you may have read in some
of my past reviews, I feel that most American rock bands from the 80's that
have attempted comebacks or reunion albums in recent years largely disappoint.
There are exceptions such as the killer new Leatherwolf album, but watching
bands like Tesla, Babylon A.D., Pretty Boy Floyd, Ratt,
Europe, and Dokken release mediocre to downright terrible material
is painful. The release of Thickskin by Skid Row lead me to put
Skid Row in the "Reunions that should not have happened" category. While
Revolutions Per Minute has some moments that are far better than Thickskin,
it's not anywhere near the quality of the band's earlier work. Furthermore,
the drastic stylistic changes from song to song are evidence that this band
doesn't have an identity right now, much like a new band trying to find their
way. Thickskin was a putrid and desperate attempt for the band to sound
relevant in the new millennium. With this new album, I still feel there's a
touch of that in the band's sound, but there are now moments when the band reaches
back to its roots, and still other moments where the band ventures off into
their own world leaving the listener scratching his head.
The first two songs of the album, Disease and Another Dick in the
System are pounding rock tracks that are very worthy of the Skid Row
name. Very much in the vein of classic Skid Row, we hear very substantial
proof that Skid Row can write catchy hard rock with an attitude when
they want to. While Johnny Solinger has a tough act to follow in replacing Sebastian
Bach, these two tracks proves that he is a top notch rock singer. If you've
ever heard his pre-Skid Row band, simply titled Solinger, you'd know
that this guy has some impressive pipes. Having said that, Solinger is in no
way, shape, or form a problem with Skid Row despite anything negative
I may say about their recent material. If the rest of the album were in line
with the first two tracks of Revolutions Per Minute, we'd be talking
about a gem of an album.
Unfortunately, the ever wandering direction of Skid Row 2006 starts
to rear its ugly head. As I said above, Skid Row can still write first
tier hard rock songs when they want to. The problem is that they choose not
to for the majority of the album. Pulling My Heart Out From Under Me
is a mid tempo modern rock track with a classic feel that would be decent if
the harmony vocals during the chorus lines weren't so sloppy. The band really
goes off the deep end with the next track, When God Can't Wait. This
is an obvious ripoff of Slade's hit Run Runaway. The Skid Row
"cover" of this Slade hit has a silly and very strange punk meets hillbilly
vibe to it. Again, Solinger's voice was clearly not meant to sing this type
of song; he really sounds like a fish out of water here. This song just fails
on every level. It could be argued that this song is meant to be funny and should
not be taken seriously. However, I'd argue that such a track should be relegated
to a b-side and not featured in the 4 spot on the album, especially when we
could have had another rocker in this spot. Shut Up Baby, I Love You
is another punk inspired track that just doesn't escape mediocrity due to it's
lack of catchiness, and the at over the top screams offered during the verses.
Strength is next, a mid tempo rocker that has a classic Skid Row
written all over it. The sound is a bit updated in nature, but it's not at all
a song where the Skids try to become something they're not. Instead, it's just
a good classic rocking track with an updated production. The next track, White
Trash is a silly pop punk number that features Beavis & Butthead caliber
toilet humor. Musically, there's nothing worth hearing with the simplistic riffs
and drum fills. You Lie is a redneck country track from out of nowhere.
We're treated to a very hokey acoustic guitar backing that makes you want to
put on your wife beater shirt and go square dancing after a romantic hayride.
Toward the middle of the song, some very punkish influences take over and eventually
dominate. The punk/country combination that Skid Row uses at times on
this album is just nauseating. Anywho, Nothing is next in line on this
album. There's really "nothing" exciting here as the title foreshadows. It's
a bland modern rock track that could've fit on Thickskin very well. This
song may impress those who like watered down guitars and basic musicianship,
but with a radio friendly chorus line. Love is Dead is one hell of a
sloppy song. Aside from the production, this song is demo quality. The drumming
is way out of sync for most of the track, and the music oddly fades out completely
for the choruses, which is just hard on the ears. Allowing a song that full of technical mistakes onto an album is just ridiculous.Let It Ride is another
punkish song whose chorus falls flat while the basic and repetitive riffs bore
the listener to tears. As a bonus track, an even more countried up version of
You Lie is included. Great. If you weren't turned off enough by the album
by this point, the bonus track should really send your fingers toward the eject
button on your CD player.
By my count, that's three good songs out of twelve, which is a quarter of the
album. I'll be generous on the math and give the album 10 points for each good
song. The rest is a total waste. If it we all crap, then I'd just dismiss Skid
Row forever as washed up and move on to something else. However, it's frustrating
to think of what this album would have sounded like if only Skid Row
would have put their energies to making great rock songs like they prove they
are still able to do on those three songs. Unfortunately, the guys decide to
dabble in silly redneck music with childish lyrics, punk based songs that require
little creativity or technical ability. I certainly don't mind one silly song
on an album to show the funny side of a band, but you can't dedicate a large
portion of an album to this drivel. To me, that's just half assing an album
up to 40 minutes (which this album is) just to get it done. Flat out copying
a Slade song just fuels this opinion in my mind. Writing 3 really good
rock songs and then throwing punk, modern rock, and hillbilly into a blender
and hoping for the best on the other nine tracks just doesn't cut it. It's really
sad to see Skid Row turn into an awful parody of their former selves.
There are flashes of the band's former greatness evident here, but not nearly
enough for me to think that the band will put it together anytime soon, if at
all. If the band says that this album is not to be taken seriously, then I guess
you don't have to take my "Crap of the Month" skeleton seriously either.