Search - Mekons :: Punk Rock

Punk Rock
Mekons
Punk Rock
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (15) - Disc #1

"Punk Rock" mixes re-recordings of the band's late 70s energetic punk rock anthems with live material recorded during their 25th anniversary tour in 2002. The result is an album with the excitement of their live show inter...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Mekons
Title: Punk Rock
Members Wishing: 2
Total Copies: 0
Label: Quarter Stick
Release Date: 1/20/2004
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
Styles: Hardcore & Punk, Indie & Lo-Fi, New Wave & Post-Punk
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 036172008223

Synopsis

Album Description
"Punk Rock" mixes re-recordings of the band's late 70s energetic punk rock anthems with live material recorded during their 25th anniversary tour in 2002. The result is an album with the excitement of their live show interwoven with the high level of production for which The Mekons are known.

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CD Reviews

Classics Revisited
WrtnWrd | Northridge, CA USA | 02/07/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)

"How do you revisit youthful indignation with the maturity and bitterness the ensuing years bestows? On what may be their 20th studio release (there are so damn many it's hard to be sure!), the Mekons revisit their Punk Rock roots. These career anarchists bring their considerable skills to bear upon 25-year-old favorites, and a few tracks written then and only recorded now. What may at first reek of gimmickry soon reveals itself another in the Mekons' famed 180° turns. Under-appreciated from the get-go, they've produced rock classics in each of the decades they've been working (most notably the alt-country cornerstone Fear and Whiskey, and the humbly named The Mekons Rock `n' Roll). Except for the original "Trevira Trousers" from their debut, none of these tracks are better in their original form. Chock full of ideas, early Mekons had little grasp to accompany their reach. Here they hit every mark, even if it's just the recreation of youthful chaos ("I'm So Happy", "Never Been in a Riot"). So if you like punk rock, you might love Punk Rock. Or at least make the overdue acquaintance of the quintessential cult band."
Pitchforkmedia Review; 7.0 out of 10.0
treblekicker | Houston, TX | 01/30/2004
(3 out of 5 stars)

"The difference between "quality" and "nostalgia value" is as simple as checking whether a song still speaks to you ten years after you discovered it. That should be simple, but it can be hard to cut through the baggage that comes whenever a familiar artist wanders back in time: When someone digs up their old material, it's assumed to be more of a sentimental gesture than a substantial one-- unless they've got an even thinner gimmick in mind.So it's hard not to get mired in expectations when you learn that the Mekons recorded Punk Rock after their 25th anniversary tour, and that it captures fifteen songs that they wrote at the band's birth (1977-81), but recorded-- some for the first time-- in the last couple years. It's a relief when the Mekons ditch all ceremony and basically treat this as a lark; they aren't trying to get "loud and sloppy" again, they don't expect reverence when they cue up "Never Was in a Riot", and the mishmash of approaches to this stuff-- from studio to live recordings, mbira-colored ballads to raw shouting-- suggests nothing but a genuine curiosity for what kind of use they can beat out of these songs.And these are fifteen of the most lumpen bashed-in songs the band ever wrote, hard knobby droppings that stomp and gnash in fast bursts. Even the scope is stunted: The "can't get ahead" frustration of songs like "32 Weeks" reminds us that this band raged harder at the landlord than the Queen, and the live takes on "Dan Dare" and "Fight the Cuts" are pounded down like a poor man trying to squeeze coal into diamonds.As for the slower tracks, "Work All Week" drops the angry stride of the Quality of Mercy is Not Strnen original, though its poignancy comes less from the lyrics than the weary way Jon Langford sings 'em: "I'll work all week to buy a ring/ Extra hours to get real gold." "Rosanne" is even more cutting: "If you have other men I will like them/ If they take you, come, I'll forgive you/ But if they take you away I will cry." And although they didn't have any zombie songs to dig up for Sally Timms, she gets the next best thing: the axe murder story "Chopper Squad", where the words run out quickly but the banjo gets to wander into dissonance.But even as Punk Rock shows that The Mekons have far better musicians today than when they were first fumbling around with Gang of Four's instruments, it also proves they're better songwriters. The songs still have something to say, but now they sound like the musings of someone who never got out of his first basement apartment. The Mekons are one of those rare bands that never stopped sounding "punk," that never got slow, boring or sane: They just broadened their horizons. And based on this evidence, it's a good thing they did.-Chris Dahlen, January 29th, 2004"