The
Blasters (look for links to this also)Personnel: Dave Alvin -
Guitars, Vocals
Phil Alvin - Guitars, Harmonica, Vocals
Bill Bateman - Drums
John Bazz - Bass
with:
Gene Taylor - Piano, Vocals
Larry Taylor - Bass
Lee Allen - Tenor Saxophone
Steve Berlin - Baritone Saxophone
Richard Greene - Violin
David Hidalgo - Mandolin
Stan Lynch - Percussion, Vocals
"We got the Louisiana boogie and the Delta blues/We got country swing and
rockabilly, too/We got jazz, country western, and Chicago blues/It's the
greatest music that you ever knew." Dave Alvin was writing about "American
Music" in his song of the same name when he penned those lines, but while he
would never be quite so arrogant as to say so himself, he could have been
talking about his band, the Blasters, who used the song as the title track
of their first album. While often lumped in with the L.A. rockabilly scene
that rose up in the wake of punk rock, from the start the Blasters displayed
a wide-ranging musical diversity that set them far apart from, say, Levi and
the Rockats. The Blasters were a supremely tight and tasteful band with
enough fire, smarts, and passion for two or three groups. Phil Alvin was a
singer who knew how to communicate the grand gesture while still touching
the small details; his brother, Dave Alvin, was a peerless songwriter who
could honor the artists who influenced him while finding a distinct and
memorable voice of his own (he could play a mean guitar to boot), and John
Bazz and Bill Bateman were a strong and swinging rhythm section. The
Blasters cut two superb albums for Slash Records that raised the bar for the
entire 1980s and '90s roots rock movement, 1981's The Blasters and 1983's
Non Fiction, and a great live EP, 1982's Over There: Live at the Venue,
London. The group's third and final set for Slash, 1985's Hard Line, was an
ambitious attempt to modernize the group's sound in hopes of finding a place
on radio, which was only partially successful, though it still contains a
number of great songs, and even the weaker numbers would raise the batting
average for most other bands. The Blasters left behind a remarkable body of
work, and Testament: The Complete Slash Recordings finally makes all of it
available on CD for the first time. The set contains 'The Blasters', 'Non
Fiction', 'Over There', and 'Hard Line' in their entirety, along with strong
outtakes from the Non Fiction and Hard Line sessions ("Kathleen" might have
been the finest song on the final album had it made the cut), four
additional performances from the show recorded for Over There, two tunes the
band recorded for the movie Streets of Fire, and a noisy but inspired duo
performance by Dave and Phil on Jimmy Reed's "Take out Some Insurance" at a
New York club gig. With Testament: The Complete Slash Recordings and
Hightone's reissue of American Music (the group's rough and-ready debut
album, cut for Rollin' Rock Records in 1980), the Blasters' entire catalog
is in print for the first time, and anyone who digs blues, rockabilly, R&B,
country, or pretty much any tributary of American postwar roots music will
have a stompin' good time with this set; rarely has a crash course in music
history been this much fun. ~~ by Mark Deming.