Description
SKU/Barcode: 602527628745
More than a quarter century may have gone by since singer Michael Monroe's band Hanoi Rocks passed from existence, but Monroe continues to carry the flag for their style of hard rock, with his solo album Sensory Overdrive being another example. That style recalls the garage rock of the mid-'60s, the proto-punk sound of the New York Dolls, in the early 70s, and the post-punk of late- 70s power pop, also anticipating the hair metal with which Monroe was associated in the 80s. Thus, the tempos are fast, the guitar plays ringing power chords, and the vocals are a penetrating screech, the whole achieving energy and irresistible drive. That description applies to the music on Sensory Overdrive, which, musically could have been made in 1978, the year referenced in the song ''78,' in which Monroe sings, 'You can take the boy out of 78/The style's gonna change, but the sentiment ain't.' Actually, it's the style that has stayed the same, thanks not only to Monroe, but also to bassist Sam Yaffa, another alumnus of Hanoi Rocks, guitarist Steve Conte, drummer Karl Rockfist, and veteran hard rock producer Jack Douglas. The sentiment expressed in Monroe's lyrics, meanwhile, has changed, if only to reflect the many years in between then and now. Monroe is withering on the subject of contemporary life, as the caustic 'Modern Day Miracle' attests with its chorus, 'Your modern day miracle is giving me a headache.' He would rather view the present in terms of his own survival, noting in 'All You Need' that 'I'm still standing tall' and in 'Gone Baby Gone,' 'I'm back on my feet again.' Obviously, he is no stranger to clich s, and the music isn't original, either. But anyone who loves rock & roll that's loud and fast will enjoy Sensory Overdrive.
1. Trick Of The Wrist
2. 78
3. Got Blood?
4. Superpowered Superfly
5. Modern Day Miracle
6. Bombs Away
7. All You Need
8. Later Wont Wait
9. Gone Baby Gone
10. Center Of Your Heart
11. Debauchery As A Fine Art