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rollingstone

rollingstone

Private Lives

Private Lives

Low Cut Connie (2020)

8.0/ 10

The Philadelphia band delivers a widely varying version of vintage wail

The title is a giveaway. Low Cut Connie's fifth album draws on the same sessions – at Ardent Studios in Memphis – that propelled this Philadelphia band's 2017 blast of Fifties-infused glam-punk hallelujah, Dirty Pictures (Part 1). But these ten tracks, mostly written by singer-pianist Adam Weiner, are hardly leftovers. In fact, the opening sequence is a knockout. "All These Kids Are Way Too High" is explosive, hilarious censure, a song about every bar band's worst nightmare – an audience that just stands and stares – detonated like the New York Dolls produced by Sam Phillips. "Beverly," in turn, is steeped in Philly soul – a mid-tempo charge of desperate need that Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff could have written for Teddy Pendergrass – then seared with slide guitar and dotted with Weiner's chiming piano, as if Elton John had joined the Replacements in time for Pleased to Meet Me.

 What follows veers wildly in setting but

not quality: the outright-Ray Charles effect of Weiner's solo boogie "One

More Time"; the barbed-Dylan ballad "Hollywood"; the

marching-R&B frenzy of "Hey! Little Child," an Alex Chilton

cover. "Please Do Not Come Home," written by guitarist James

Everhart, is hardcore roar lit with power-pop glow, while "Master

Tapes" is Weiner's inspired analog metaphor for an emotional crisis,

triggered with swampy electric piano like the Meters kicking off a Faces

record. Low Cut Connie are defiantly old-school in their roots and values. But Dirty Pictures (Part 2),

like its predecessor, is a stand-alone triumph of missionary zeal.

The title is a giveaway. Low Cut Connie's fifth album draws on the same sessions – at Ardent Studios in Memphis – that propelled this Philadelphia band's 2017 blast of Fifties-infused glam-punk hallelujah, Dirty Pictures (Part 1). But these ten tracks, mostly written by singer-pianist Adam Weiner, are hardly leftovers. In fact, the opening sequence is a knockout. "All These Kids Are Way Too High" is explosive, hilarious censure, a song about every bar band's worst nightmare – an audience that just stands and stares – detonated like the New York Dolls produced by Sam Phillips. "Beverly," in turn, is steeped in Philly soul – a mid-tempo charge of desperate need that Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff could have written for Teddy Pendergrass – then seared with slide guitar and dotted with Weiner's chiming piano, as if Elton John had joined the Replacements in time for Pleased to Meet Me. What follows veers wildly in setting but not quality: the outright-Ray Charles effect of Weiner's solo boogie "One More Time"; the barbed-Dylan ballad "Hollywood"; the marching-R&B frenzy of "Hey! Little Child," an Alex Chilton cover. "Please Do Not Come Home," written by guitarist James Everhart, is hardcore roar lit with power-pop glow, while "Master Tapes" is Weiner's inspired analog metaphor for an emotional crisis, triggered with swampy electric piano like the Meters kicking off a Faces record. Low Cut Connie are defiantly old-school in their roots and values. But Dirty Pictures (Part 2), like its predecessor, is a stand-alone triumph of missionary zeal.

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