The Toasters "Hard Band for Dead" 1996
The Toasters "Hard Band for Dead" 1996
Review by Jo-Ann Greene
The Toasters's clever take on the title of Prince Buster's ska classic "Hard Man for Dead", says it all; this is a band who have soldiered on through thick and thin, determined to complete their mission of spreading ska to the masses. And to that end, the group open a window to the past, although the Buster cover apart, the band don't so much revisit ska's past as the Sixties's in general. Initially the band toyed with titling this set The Toasters Watch TV, and fabulous versions of two vintage theme songs - "Secret Agent Man" and "Maxwell Smart" (the theme to Get Smart), illustrate why. But the group quickly widened their scope far beyond telly tunes. "Don't Come Running" briefly pays tribute to the British hard rock heroes that emerged at the end of the decade, "Properly" to the rock steady that raged in Jamaica a couple of years earlier, while "Skaternity" shines that style through a Two Tone prism.
But the sounds of the Sixties were themselves rooted in the Fifties past, and the instrumental "Mouse" marvelously resurrects the jazzy big band sounds of that decade, assisted by Skatalite saxophonist Lester Sterling. Equally crucial to the ska mix was boogie, and "Speak Your Mind" delves into that style with sheer abandon, with the great Laurel Aitken taking the mic for the festivities. The Toasters even return to their early days, revisiting "Talk Is Cheap", a track from their 1987 Skaboom! album. The group pull past and present together on their musical homage to "Chuck Berry", as Bucket lyrically traces ska's path from American R&B to the shores of Jamaica, sailing off to the UK, and washing back up on US shores with Two Tone. And the "2-Tone Army" marches on, with its "Nineties beats and Fifties roots," on this rousing affirmation of the third wave, whose irrepressible riddim would eventually metamorphose into the theme song for the Nickelodeon cartoon Kablam!, bringing everything full circle. With its phenomenal mix of styles old and new, a guest cast of legendary veterans and younger heroes - King Django, New York Ska Jazz Ensemble keyboardist Cary Brown, and Ventures guitarist Jerry McGee, Hard Band epitomizes the power and glory of the third wave, while continuing to pay tribute to all those that came before.
Tracks
1 2-Tone Army Hingley 3:19
2 Talk Is Cheap Hingley 3:11
3 Friends Hingley, Toasters, Ugbomah 2:56
4 Secret Agent Man Barri, Sloan 2:40
5 Chuck Berry Hingley 2:38
6 Mouse Reiter 3:44
7 Hard Man Fe Dead Campbell 3:05
8 Don't Come Running Faulkner 3:13
9 Properly McCain, Ugbomah 2:44
10 Maxwell Smart 1:58
11 I Wasn't Going to Call You Anyway Hingley 3:01
12 Speak Your Mind Hingley, Rice 3:11
13 Skaternity McCain, Reiter 2:41
14 Dave Goes Crazy Traditional 2:07
btw - if You have any other album by this band - please - share!:)
Sincerely
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