""Time Bomb High School" opens with "Stormy Weather", and Reigning Sound attack that old Doo Wop chestnut with abandon, making it twist and shout where it once only strolled. It's like they snuck their grampa's old Edsel out of the garage and fuel-injected the crate, replacing polite melancholy with desperate vocals, distorted guitar jangle, and a roller-rink organ swirling in the mix. And this souped-up jalopy is only held together with tape and glue and hormones, threatening to break apart in a fiery crash before it gets anywhere near Dead Man's Curve. A total thrill ride, in other words.That opening shot is no mistake. Ex-Oblivians auteur Greg Cartwright's new combo is hellbent on rocking out like the last 25 years of punk never happened. They gnaw on the same roots that formed bands like the Standells and the Sonics; they dip in to the same melting pot of American music that later forged the Velvet Underground, the Modern Lovers, and the Ramones. Songs like "Reptile Style" and "Brown Paper Sack" sound like immediate classics from a parallel 1950s universe, churning with an adrenalized rush of Memphis soul and garage punk. Some heart-on-the-sleeve ballads help pace the album, but there's never a fear that this sock hop will end with a waltz.This is the sort of archeological dig that rock bands often get lost in, returning to the surface with nothing to show but an academic dissertation and a whiteface of lime chalk. But Reigning Sound seem to have dug deeper than most, with less respect and a clumsy exuberance, unafraid of shattering a few fossils, and in the process they've uncovered something new and exciting."
Ferocious, Soulful, Brilliant...
Roy Pearl | 10/19/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Don't get Reigning Sound confused with all those other "savior-of-rock-and-roll" bands with more hype than talent, more image than imagination. This record proves that Reigning Sound could play rings around all of them without breaking a sweat.Melding the best Memphis traditions of Soul, R&B, and deeply-felt Country with ferocious Garage is something that couldn't have been easy to do... and yet "Time Bomb High School" is all those things: a thick, chewy stew of 15 guitar-and-organ-based songs that leave you out of breath, wanting more.Play this thing loud and repeatedly -- you'll feel better for it."
Criminally ignored
Jay F. Bolick | Rose Hill, NC USA | 09/16/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Why is Mr. Cartwright (and his band) so underappreciated? Genuine actual rock-n-roll 10 times better than all the corporate backed bands such as Hives/Stripes/Leons/Jet et. al. Almost as good as the Dirtbombs, and that my friends ain't bad. By the way I say this as an old guy who grew up on everything from Beefheart to the Flamin' Groovies so I think I might know real rock-n-roll when I hear it."
Oh yeah!
Jumpin' Jesus | Adelaide, Australia | 09/22/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)
"From the first twenty seconds this is addictive stuff, some kind of revelation. Every day for the past week there's been a track from this album that I just can't get out of my head. It's classic in the sense that its so well-rounded eg. cool as hell lyrics, well placed tempo shifts from song to song, real passion and rawness in the playing, a depth of sound. As a fan of ragged and urgent vocals, Greg Cartwright's vocal pleas are awesome - a hark back to garage greats (Gerry Roslie - Sonics, Rob Younger - Radio Birdman).With the exception of anything to do with Mick Collins (Dirtbombs, Screws etc.) and a handful of others, this absolutely pales so-called (by major label marketing execs) garage acts like The Kills, Vines, Hives, Strokes et al. This is rock n' roll for adults, but should be for kids - if only they got to hear it."
I Don't Believe
sarcasto | Soulsville, USA | 09/25/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Perhaps the band that most deserves the "garage-rock revival" tag, but they're so much more. Nothing particularly revelatory about the music. It's basic rock & roll in the best way, excellent melodies and a tight rhythm section. Sounds like 1977 Elvis Costello would if he were American. Buy this right now if you want some rock & roll to remind you that it's not dead.