Showing posts with label Penetrators. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Penetrators. Show all posts

Monday, September 11, 2023

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio # 1198

A blog post is an awful way to be informed of bad news. My apologies if this message falls into that category for you. Please brace yourself if you haven't already heard about Syracuse rock 'n' roll singer Jack Lipton.

Over Labor Day weekend, I received a text from a friend, an urgent request to call as soon as I could. I called back immediately, and that's how I found out that Jack Lipton, lead singer of the Penetrators and a longtime friend of This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, had taken his own life. 

Words fail. I was a fan of the Penetrators, ever since I heard their first single "Gotta Have Her"/"Baby Dontcha Tell Me" upon its release in 1979. Other mutual friends were closer to Jack than I was, but Jack and I were on good terms; my sense of loss doesn't compare to what others may feel at this time, but my heart goes out to them. I feel what I feel, and that's bad enough.

I've been trying--half-heartedly, and heavy-heartedly--to write something about Jack. I can't do it. Maybe later, maybe never, but absolutely not now. For the moment, I'll look back on things I wrote years ago about Jack's work, here and here. Dana and I will play a few songs, and we will mourn in the manner that fits us. 

But this larger point needs to be said, again and again: Suicide is devastating; its pain goes beyond those who've left us, and it can haunt its survivors. I've felt this sting before, more than once. And when it happens, you wonder if there was anything you could have done that might have helped.

Maybe there was. Maybe there wasn't. You'll never be certain. 

If you know someone going through this terrible ache, this pressure toward deciding that the only way out of life's misery is to end that life entirely, or if you're feeling this horrible ache yourself...there is support available. Your friends and family may be able to listen, and they may be able to help. There is also, always, the Suicide and Crisis Hotline, which can be reached by dialing 988.

Someone will listen. Somewhere, someone will listen. Your life is worth saving. Our lives are worth saving.

Rest easy, Jack. This one's in your memory.

This is what rock 'n' roll sounded like on yet another Sunday night in Syracuse this week.

This show is available as a podcast.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM

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Volume 3: download
Volume 4: CD or download
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TIRnRR # 1198: 9/10/2023
TIRnRR FRESH SPINS! Tracks we think we ain't played before are listed in bold

THE PENETRATORS: Teenage Lifestyle (Swami, Basement Anthology 1976-84)
THE TREND: Peer Pressure (Hate, Batman Live At Budokan)
THE BEATLES: I'll Cry Instead (Apple, A Hard Day's Night)
BLONDIE: Walk Like Me (Chrysalis, The Platinum Collection)
THE ISLEY BROTHERS: Nobody But Me (Varese Sarabande, Shake It Up, Baby!)
--
THE CATHOLIC GIRLS: Hear My Prayer (single)
THE BABLERS; You Are The One For Me (Big Stir, single)
THE MONKEES: The Door Into Summer (Rhino, Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn & Jones. Ltd.)
ORBIS MAX: Anyone's Yesterday (single)
THE SOFT BOYS: (I Wanna Be An) Anglepoise Lamp (Rhino, VA: DIY: The Modern World)
--
STRANGERS IN A STRANGE LAND: World In Action (single)
JACK LEE: Any Day Now (Alive, Anthology: Bigger Than Life)
GRAHAM PARKER & THE GOLDTOPS: Wicked Wit (Big Stir, Last Chance To Learn The Twist)
MATTHEW SWEET & SUSANNA HOFFS: (What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love & Understanding (Edsel, Completely Under The Covers)
THE POPTARTS: Jealousy [alternate version] (PlumTone, Fresh...Out Of The Toaster)
THE BANGLES: Hero Takes A Fall (Columbia, All Over The Place)
--
RINEHEARTS: Could You Would You (Cheersquad, single)
RICHARD HELL & THE VOIDOIDS: Downtown At Dawn (Sire, RICHARD HELL: Spurts: The Richard Hell Story)
THE FLASHCUBES: Forget About You (Big Stir, Pop Masters)
CYNDI LAUPER: I Drove All Night (Epic, The Essential Cyndi Lauper)
LIBRARIANS WITH HICKEYS: Can't Wait 'Till Summer (Big Stir, Handclaps & Tambourines)
JOHNNY HALLYDAY: Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On (Jasmine, Elle Est Terrible! The Rock 'n' Roll Years)
--
THE VAPOUR TRAILS: Reminisce (Futureman, On A Beautiful Day)
20/20: Yellow Pills (Oglio, 20/20--Lookout)
THE TEXTONES: Vacation (Big Beat, single)
BADFINGER: No Matter What (Apple, No Dice)
STEVENSON & COMPANY: Insane (n/a, Stevenson & Company)
--
DOLPH CHANEY: Ice Cream Embers (Big Stir, Mug)
TOM PETTY & THE HEARTBREAKERS: American Girl (MCA, Anthology: Through The Years)
PRINCE: Hot Summer (NPG, Welcome 2 America)
TOMMY JAMES & THE SHONDELLS: Mirage (Rhino, Anthology)
ROOFTOP SCREAMERS FEATURING TIM SMITH: Another Life (single)
UTOPIA: Love In Action (Rhino, TODD RUNDGREN: The Very Best Of Todd Rundgren)
--
The Greatest Record Ever Made!
THE JAM: That's Entertainment (Polydor, Direction Reaction Creation)
SUGAR: If I Can't Change Your Mind (Rykodisc, Copper Blue)
SUPER 8: Susan Revolving (n/a, Raindrops On Roses)
RUFUS: Tell Me Something Good (Rhino, VA: Can You Dig It?)
THE RAMONES: Oh Oh I Love Her So (Rhino, Leave Home)
THE SEEDS: Can't Seem To Make You Mine (GNP Crescendo, The Seeds)
JACK "PENETRATOR" LIPTON: It's My Life (Rockinnn', Forgotten Boy)
--
NICK BERTLING: There Was A Thing (Futureman, Process And Contact)
THE ROOKS: Sometimes [alternate version] (Futureman, VA: This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 1)
THE PENETRATORS: Time Is Mine (Code 213, single)
ROBERT GORDON WITH LINK WRAY: Sea Cruise (Raven, Robert Gordon With Link Wray)
BOBBY SUTLIFF: Same Way Tomorrow (Jem, Only Ghosts Remain Plus)
THE REPLACEMENTS: I Will Dare (Sire, For Sale: Live At Maxwell's 1986)
JACK "PENETRATOR" LIPTON: Search And Destroy (Rockinnn', Forgotten Boy)
THE BEVIS FROND: He'd Be A Diamond (Woronzow, New River Head)
--
THE PENETRATORS: Gotta Have Her (Swami, Basement Anthology 1976-84)
THE PENETRATORS: Teenage Lifestyle (n/a, Ruff N' Tuffy's)
LULU: Tossin' And Turnin' (RPM, Shout! The Complete Decca Recordings)

Thursday, October 8, 2020

THE PENETRATORS: Live At Kenny's 1980

Back in 2000, I wrote the liner notes for Live At Kenny's 1980, an LP by "Syracuse's Only!," The Penetrators. And here they are!

You probably had to be there to understand, but the conservative little city of Syracuse, NY (motto: "Snow? Yeah, we got snow") was a genuinely exciting place to be a young rock 'n' roll fan in the late '70s and early '80s. The vibrance of a re-energized, vital international rock 'n' roll movement, jump-started by punk and new wave, was keenly felt even in my sleepy little home town, as local bands like The Flashcubes, The Ohms, The Poptarts, The Most, Screen Test, The Dead Ducks Band, 1.4.5., and The Tearjerkers all plugged in and let fly with a thrilling, raucous pop noise that was nothing short of transcendent. Many of us believed--really believed--that Syracuse would be the next Liverpool.

The Penetrators--originally a self-contained recording-only combo, consisting of singer Jack Lipton and singer/songwriter/instrumentalist Eliot "Spike" Kagan--were a part of this scene, yet subtly apart from it. The DIY spirit that sparked the punk and new wave explosion in Syracuse and elsewhere was certainly and inspiration for The Penetrators, and local new wave kingpins The Most even covered a Penetrators song, "Drive Me Crazy," in their live shows. But, while most of the local scenesters were working within a broad power pop or new wave aesthetic, The Penetrators were proudly, defiantly...well, just plain grungier than any other band in town.

I mean that in a good way. The Penetrators' records revealed a band that drew just as much inspiration from '60s frat-rock bands like The Kingsmen and The Sonics as they did from The Ramones. They were like a 1965 AM radio signal, with its wires crossed into Never Mind The Bollocks, Here's The Sex Pistols. As Jack Lipton recalls, "I always envisioned The Penetrators as Iggy and the Stooges' Raw Power LP meets The Rolling Stones' Exile On Main Street." And Spike Kagan adds, "The Penetrators were formed by Jack and myself as a tribute to all the bands we had been in and formed up to that time. Such memorable groups as Lloyd and his Groovy Guys, Big Cheese and the Goomers, and The Little Willie Experience were just a part of our initial forays into rock 'n' roll immortality."

I was a fan of The Penetrators. I eagerly read about them in the local fanzine Poser (and in the tres-fab international rock mag Trouser Press), and I bought their two rockin' 45s at Desert Shore Records up on the SU hill. But I never saw them live; they weren't doing live shows when I was in Syracuse, and I'd moved away by the time they began playing out. Now, after all these years, I finally have a proper chance to experience the buzz of a live rock 'n' roll show by the self-proclaimed "#1 Band In Town," The Penetrators. Put on your rock 'n' roll face--it's Penetratin' time!

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This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, and on the web at http://sparksyracuse.org/ You can read about our history here.


The many fine This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio compilation albums are still available, each full of that rockin' pop sound you crave. A portion of all sales benefit our perpetually cash-strapped community radio project:


Volume 1: download

Volume 2: CD or download
Volume 3: download
Volume 4: CD or download
Waterloo Sunset--Benefit For This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio:  CD or download

Carl's writin' a book! The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1)will contain 165 essays about 165 tracks, each one of 'em THE greatest record ever made. An infinite number of records can each be the greatest record ever made, as long as they take turns. Updated initial information can be seen here: THE GREATEST RECORD EVER MADE! (Volume 1).

Thursday, November 16, 2017

THE EVERLASTING FIRST: Quick Takes For P [music edition]

Continuing a look back at my first exposure to a number of rock 'n' roll acts and superheroes (or other denizens of print or periodical publication), some of which were passing fancies, and some of which I went on to kinda like. They say you never forget your first time; that may be true, but it's the subsequent visits--the second time, the fourth time, the twentieth time, the hundredth time--that define our relationships with the things we cherish. Ultimately, the first meeting is less important than what comes after that. But every love story still needs to begin with that first kiss.

PEZBAND



"Sparkling Power Pop!" While it might seem unlikely that I could possibly resist that specific hype in the late '70s, the truth is that I didn't really get Pezband at the time. I think I picked up the Laughing At The Pieces album on a trip to Cleveland, and I may have purchased Cover To Cover somewhere in that time frame, but neither moved me, so I traded 'em in. Fast-forward to the early '90s, and it suddenly dawned on me that I needed Pezband records, so I tracked down each and every one of the band's releases. "Love Goes Underground" and "Stop! Wait A Minute" are my favorites.

THE PENETRATORS



I probably read about this band billed as "Syracuse's Only!" in the pages of our local punk/new wave fanzine Poser in 1979, before I ever heard their music. I bought their debut 45 "Gotta Have Her"/"Baby Don'tcha Tell Me," and loved it (particularly the B-side); I liked the follow-up, "Teenage Lifestyle," even more. Years later, I wrote the liner notes to a Penetrators live album, and to a solo EP by Penetrators lead singer Jack Lipton; I never had an opportunity to see the band play live.

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You can support this blog by becoming a patron on Patreon: Fund me, baby! 

Our new compilation CD This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, Volume 4 is now available from Kool Kat Musik! 29 tracks of irresistible rockin' pop, starring Pop Co-OpRay PaulCirce Link & Christian NesmithVegas With Randolph Featuring Lannie FlowersThe SlapbacksP. HuxIrene PeñaMichael Oliver & the Sacred Band Featuring Dave MerrittThe RubinoosStepford KnivesThe Grip WeedsPopdudesRonnie DarkThe Flashcubes,Chris von SneidernThe Bottle Kids1.4.5.The SmithereensPaul Collins' BeatThe Hit SquadThe RulersThe Legal MattersMaura & the Bright LightsLisa Mychols, and Mr. Encrypto & the Cyphers. You gotta have it, so order it here.

Tuesday, November 1, 2016

BRIGHT LIGHTS! Syracuse New Wave Rock 'n' Roll Reunion 2014: Original Press Release and Band FAQ Letter

 

Before the successful BRIGHT LIGHTS! Syracuse New Wave Rock 'n' Roll Reunion that Dana and I hosted this past July, we hosted a previous (also successful) BRIGHT LIGHTS! yadda yadda show in 2014 at Syracuse's legendary Lost Horizon. That show was recorded for a proposed DVD release, though I don't know if that project will ever come to pass. But, in the mean time, here is our original press release for the event, as well as the letter we sent to all of the participating acts:

PRESS RELEASE:


BRIGHT LIGHTS!  A Syracuse New Wave Rock 'n' Roll Reunion
Saturday,July 19th, 2014 at The Lost Horizon in Syracuse, NY

Alternative music had to start somewhere. Most would agree alternative started in the '70s, with the punk rock sounds of bands like The Ramones, and the grungy spirit of iconic clubs like New York City's legendary CBGB's. But Syracuse also had its own vibrant punk/new wave scene in the late '70s and early '80s, when great local indie rockers like THE FLASHCUBES, THE TREND, THE MOST, THE PENETRATORS, THE DEAD DUCKS BAND, SCREEN TEST, 1.4.5., PORCELAIN FOREHEAD, DISTORTION, THE MIAMIS, and THE ANTICS were among the many DIY acts making noise at local nightspots like The Brookside, The Jab,The Firebarn, The Insomniac, The Slide, and The Lost Horizon.

Most of those clubs are long gone now, but THE LOST HORIZON still stands, and it remains the closest thing to a CBGB's that Syracuse has ever had. In the early '80s, The Lost Horizon hosted a popular weekly new wave showcase called "Bright Lights, Monday Nights," featuring both Screen Test and 1.4.5. with a different guest band each week. And on Saturday, July 19th, the acts who created Syracuse's original alternative scene will return to the LOST for one big multi-band show: BRIGHT LIGHTS!  A SYRACUSE NEW WAVE ROCK 'N' ROLL REUNION.

Headlining the show will be Syracuse's own power pop powerhouse THE FLASHCUBES, making their first club appearance since being inducted into the Syracuse Music Hall of Fame this past March. The Flashcubes will be joined on this bill by THE TREND, THE MOST, SCREEN TEST, 1.4.5., THE DEAD DUCKS BAND, PORCELAIN FOREHEAD, THE MIAMIS, and DISTORTION, each of whom is reuniting for this show; former Penetrators lead singer Jack Lipton will perform with his current group, THE JACK PENETRATOR BAND, while Antics bassist MAURA KENNEDY will pay a unique tribute to Syracuse new wave with MAURA & THE BRIGHT LIGHTS.

BRIGHT LIGHTS! celebrates an incredible period in local music history. Over the last 30 years, Syracuse's late '70s/early '80s new wave scene has gained an international mystique; collectors from all over the world pay top dollar for vintage 'Cuse vinyl, and records by The Flashcubes, Screen Test, 1.4.5., The Trend, and The Penetrators have been reissued in America, Japan, and Italy. MAURA KENNEDY, that little teenaged punk bassist for The Antics, is now one-half (with husband Pete Kennedy) of the world-renowned folk-pop duo THE KENNEDYS, and she's coming to The Lost Horizon fresh off a UK tour. PORCELAIN FOREHEAD lead singer "Porcelana" is really singer and actress KAREN OBERLIN, now one of the leading cabaret singers in New York City, and she'll return to her new wave roots for one night only at BRIGHT LIGHTS!  (And she'll be joined by her husband, author DAVID HAJDU, on guitar.)

But the most poignant tale of BRIGHT LIGHTS! is the story of THE TRENDThe Trend was one of the most beloved acts in the early '80s Syracuse new wave scene, a teen trio high on The Ramones and The Who, blistering through high-octane sets of originals and covers,winning eager fans with an irresistibly basic barrage of drums and two guitars.The Trend released one 45 (now a high-priced collectible) and one album, and even eventually added a bass player without diluting its no-frills rush. But it all ended in 1985, when lead singer J. Marc Patenaude was killed in a car accident at the age of 21. The Trend stopped on that day, and the surviving members have not played together since then. For BRIGHT LIGHTS!, the surviving members of The Trend will reunite for the first time in nearly 30 years, with J. Marc's 16-year-old niece CHLOE ROACH singing lead. Consider this a single-finger salute to the passage of time and the cruel whims of fate, and consider it catharsis you can dance to.  The brightest lights never fade.
**
WHAT:   BRIGHT LIGHTS!  A SYRACUSE NEW WAVE ROCK 'N' ROLL REUNION

WHO:  THE FLASHCUBES, THE TREND, MAURA & THE BRIGHT LIGHTS [with MAURA KENNEDY],  PORCELAIN FOREHEAD [with KAREN OBERLIN and DAVID HAJDU), DICK HUMMER, THE MOST, THE DEAD DUCKS BAND, SCREEN TEST, 1.4.5.,  THE JACK PENETRATOR BAND, THE MIAMIS, and DISTORTION.  Your hosts are DANA & CARL.

WHEN n’ WHERE:  Saturday, July 19th from 8 pm to 1am  (doors open at 7:00 pm), at Syracuse’s legendary home for rock 'n' roll, THE LOST HORIZON. 

$10 admission, all-ages show, tickets available now

And here's the letter we sent to the bands:


Here's a quick list of dos, don'ts, and sundry WTFs for the BRIGHT LIGHTS! gig.

 1.  Due to the number of bands involved, there is NO guest list at all.  The bands get in, but everyone else will need to pony up the ten bucks apiece.  No one’s doing this for the money, but we do hope to generate enough ticket sales to be able to pay out…something. We'll try to figure out a fair share for everyone involved.

 2.  There WILL be a merch table.  BRING STUFF TO SELL!  Captive audience!  Big reunion!  The more they drink, the better we sound!  Or something.

 3.  12 bands.  INCREDIBLY tight time schedule.  This whole thing depends on each band getting on and off within its allotted time.  The back line should make for easier, quicker transitions. Scott Dixon of the Lost Horizon will be managing this part of the production, so that things will move smoothly. You will be in VERY competent, experienced hands. I wish we had time for everyone to play longer, but that’s just not the way this type of show is set up.

4.  The parking situation at the Lost is very challenging.  Load-In is at 5:00; there is a limited amount of parking at the hair supply place just up the hill (the old 7-11, as anyone on this bill would likely remember).  Warn your family, friends, and fans NOT to park in the old Mobil lot; the owner is…what's a nicer term for rat bastard?  He probably likes Pablo Cruise, and hates The Ramones. Prick. Parking should be available at the Asian grocery and at the former Outback restaurant (on Erie Blvd).

 5.  Logistics forbid much in the way of a sound check.  Shared back line, plus the magic powers of The Lost Horizon will make it all right.

 6.  Oh yeah:  shared back line!  We got yer drums and those big cabinets that make big noise.  There will be no opportunity to move any of this equipment around during the show, so everyone will have to plop their bass player in the same spot on stage.

 7.  If you need a rehearsal space the day of the show, you may be in luck. Jeff Moleski of Moletrax Studio has offered space for bands who need it that day. You can reach Jeff at  315-383-7372 to reserve your time.  Space is being booked NOW, so get in touch with Jeff ASAP.

 8.  This is gonna be great, great fun for everyone.  We want you to have fun, but we expect you to put on a great show, too.  No one expects you to be The Beatles, nor even The Bay City Rollers, but we do ask that you take it…okay, taking it seriously may be too much to ask.  But c'mon--try to put on the kind of great rock 'n' roll show we all used to enjoy in the original Bright Lights era. You’re on the bill because we believe you're gonna do just that.

 9. Lastly, and maybe most importantly, we are NOT professional promoters and we are trying to stage a show that would normally require plenty of cash up front to buy ads on radio and in newspapers, to insure that we get a crowd. Well, we don’t have that. But what we DO have, is YOU, and all your bandmates, friends and family. In this age of social media, we have tools to spread the word that we NEVER had before. So we are asking you to USE THEM. Post the event on Facebook and any other social media site you use and encourage everyone to SHARE! Many of you are coming a long way to do this, so let’s make sure that we pack the place and not waste this precious opportunity.

 More questions?  Questions are good!  Answers are hard!  But fire away nonetheless.  I think there's a fair shot we just might pull this whole thing off.

BRIGHT LIGHTS! is Saturday, July 19th at The Lost Horizon.  Doors at 7:00, live music at 8:00.   $10 admission, All-Ages show.


Although I wrote the first and final drafts of all of the above, it was compiled with the help of the rest of the BRIGHT LIGHTS! brain trust, including Dana Bonn and Paul Armstrong, and most especially Gary Frenay.

My notes indicate that this was the final draft of our press release. We had previously planned to have Jeff Moleski's band Amerikan Primitive close the show, but they had to bow out. Local legend Dick Hummer (formerly of Machine And Hummer) was scheduled to join Porcelain Forehead, but a family emergency forced Dick to cancel. There were also complications with The Jack Lipton Band, but Jack himself was able to join 1.4.5. for a couple of songs.

The press release was sufficient to warrant an invitation for Gary, Dana, and I to appear on Channel 9's Bridge Street TV show. That was a lot of fun, but not as much fun as the BRIGHT LIGHTS! shows themselves.

Will there be a third edition of these BRIGHT LIGHTS! reunions? Only time will tell....


Saturday, March 12, 2016

Jack "Penetrator" Lipton: Bad Boy

These are my liner notes to Bad Boy, a 2004 EP by Jack "Penetrator" Lipton.


A BAD LITTLE KID MOVES INTO THE NEIGHBORHOOD

A dash of Dylan, a roll of Stones...wait, that's what Time magazine said about Paul Revere and the Raiders in 1966.  Time has thus far remained strangely mute on the subject of the midnight ride of Jack Lipton, so I guess we've gotta take up the slack right here. 

As a young man in the small 'n' sedate city of Syracuse, NY (motto:  "We're gettin' a MALL!"), Jack Lipton grew up with a rock 'n' roll dream of wedding the deadly, cocksure cool of The Rolling Stones circa Exile On Main Street with the raw power of Iggy and the Stooges.  He first achieved notoriety as the lead singer of The Penetrators, a band billed as "Syracuseís Only!," before leaving Central New York behind to declare his love for that dirty water down by the banks of the River Charles.  Hmph--traitor.  But Jack retained that early dream, and he pursues it with stalker-like intensity on this, his very first solo release.
           
As Exhibit A, consider Jack's ace take on Iggy and the Stooges' proto-punk classic "Search And Destroy."  Backed by a badass band of rockin' alt-pop luminaries--the great Paul Armstrong of The Flashcubes on guitars, Tony Kaczynski of Fireking on bass, and drummer Ducky Carlisle (best known as an in-demand producer, but legendary in Syracuse as the former timekeeper for The Ohms and 1.4.5., AND TAKE OFF YER HAT WHEN I SAY THOSE NAMES!!)--Jack throws his body, soul and collection of old Creem magazines into the song, wailin' away with the transcendent furor of a damned spirit rammin' through the gates of Hell.  He doesn't surpass Iggy--because really, y'know, who could?--but he manages to look ol' Ig square in the eye without flinching or conceding any ground whatsoever.  And that's an accomplishment in itself.
           
The EP also includes two originals, "Trouble" and "Get Off The Corner," co-written by Jack with producer John Fannon, who played all the instruments on those two tracks.  Both of these recall the street-wise, semi-jaded romanticism of Ed Hamell (another expatriate Syracusan who blew town--jeez, was it something we said?!), influenced as well by Springsteen but filtered through a garage-bred grittiness that's far less Woody Guthrie and much more Johnny Thunders.  The record--and YES, you can still refer to CDs as "records," you insufferable nitpicker--concludes with a cover of The Standells' "Dirty Water," proving that Jack's surly, swaggering heart remains in the garage from whence this Bad Boy came.

Hmmm.  Trouble.  Search And Destroy.  Get Off The Corner.  Dirty Water.  This is hardly a litany of sweetness and light, but it's pretty much what you should expect from a self-described bad boy.  Hear now four tales told by the same sort of unrepentant rock 'n' roller celebrated in song by Larry Williams and those Beatle guys.  A bad little kid's movin' into YOUR neighborhood.  Now Bad Boy--behave yourself.