4/03/2010

RUBBER CITY REBELS - Rubber City Rebels

RUBBER CITY REBELS Rubber City Rebels lp 1980
Somebody's Gonna Get (Their Heads Kicked In Tonight) / Paper Dolls / Gonna Be Strong / Child Eaters / Laugh / Young And Dumb / Lonely Fool / Bluer Than Blue / Rubber City Rebels / No Feelings.
Produced by D. Fieger & M. Lewis.
Rubber City Rebels: R. Firestone: rhythm guitar & vocals / B. Clic: lead guitar & background vocals / J. Bethesda: bass & background vocals / B. Matheson: drums &
background vocals.
Akron, OH's Rubber City Rebels were yet another hot, terrific punk-era rock & roll band circa 1977 that suffered from the total lack of independent labels back then. Lacking a strong connection to New York, they never got a Sire, Warner Brothers or Mercury deal like a few other great Ohio contemporaries (Dead Boys, Devo, and Pere Ubu, respectively) until they moved to L.A. and scored a deal with Capitol so much later, in 1980, when this sound was no longer au courant. But they were surely those bands' equal, very comparable to their friends the Dead Boys, who shared their Stooges/MC5 fixation. As well, singer Rod Firestone booked dozens of such bands into their home Akron club, the Crypt, that they somehow ended up owning and managing after setting the attendance record there one night. Their sound was nails-tough garage punk, part New York Dolls, part Dead Boys, and most of all part 1973 Stooges. And they've got that fantastic dirty sound with absolute rock & roll ethos that makes so many still obsess about them and the other bands of 1977. Allmusic

Although Devo, Rachel Sweet, Chrissie Hynde and the Waitresses all fared well on major labels during the new wave era, the Rubber City Rebels proved it was possible to come from Akron, Ohio and still roll into commercial oblivion. No matter. That didn't stop them from more than two decades of blazing guitar and funny lyrics that share a sensibility with the first Dictators album. The Rebels' side of From Akron, a local self-release shared 50-50 with the Bizarros, contains such ghastly/funny send-ups as "Brain Job" the infanticide-discouraging "Child Eaters."
After a move to Los Angeles, the quartet led by singer-guitarist Rod Firestone and guitarist Buzz Clic earned a rep, got signed and made a self-titled album co-produced by Knack leader Doug Fieger for his band's label. With loud instrumental skill and a strong sense of the absurd, Rubber City Rebels is a knockout record that gets the most mileage out of wonderfully snotty punkish originals like "Young and Dumb" and a recut "Child Eaters" (which resembles Killer-era Alice Cooper) and then fills up on a wild selection of covers, including ex-Nerve Jack Lee's catchy and touching "Paper Dolls," Fleetwood Mac's kitschy '50s fakeout "Somebody's Gonna Get (Their Head Kicked in Tonight)" and the Sex Pistols' "No Feelings." This is rock satire that delivers a convincing kick as well as entertaining kicks. Reissued 20 years later, the album gained one more original ("Brainwave") and two more well-chosen retreads — a crafty version of Alice Cooper's superior ode to stardom "Caught in a Dream" and a tired swipe at the Stones' "Surprise, Surprise."
The Rebels folded for a time and Firestone moved on. The Firetones released the Trouble EP — four songs duplicated on both sides of a 12-inch. Unlike his former band, all the humor here is on the sleeve; the melodic guitar tunes offer rock excitement but not much rib-tickling.
Whatever happened to the group for a generation, June 8th, 2001 found Firestone, Clic and a new rhythm section onstage in fine fettle, augmenting the old repertoire with such relevant additions as the Dead Boys' "Sonic Reducer," the Dolls' "Personality Crisis" and the Music Machine's "Talk Talk." Live From Akron, which reveals a lot of the same charged show biz spirit as a Cheap Trick show, rocks just as hard as the band ever did, and the old songs hold up just fine. Bravo, boys! Trouser Press
Cd covers by Max!

3 commentaires:

  1. RUBBER CITY REBELS "Rubber City Rebels"
    320 kbps or wav + cd covers by Max !

    Enjoy it & leave comments !

    RépondreSupprimer
  2. for me this was one of the greatest punk lp's ever made bought my copy 20 years ago for 1.99, still have it today along with the reissue they did on cd a few years ago. nice post rambler. actually their new albums are pretty good as well. These guys are 10 times better than most punk from that time period as well.

    RépondreSupprimer
  3. great post,me too still have this lp,a bargain find of many years ago,and totally agree with nekrodad...happy easter you all!

    RépondreSupprimer