Like its immediate predecessor
I Will Be Me,
Rippin' Up Time strikes a balance between the past and present, the delicate and the heavy, the spiritual and the physical. Appropriately for a record that lives teetering on the edge,
Rippin' Up Time also evokes musical memories of
Dave Davies' heyday with
the Kinks in the '60s -- quite deliberately so on "Front Room," which romanticizes his earliest days -- but often it most recalls the arena rock records
Dave made in the early '80s, just when
the Kinks planted a firm foothold in America and when he started to carve out his own identity separate from the band.
Davies seems to have made the record somewhat on the cheap -- the rhythms feel stiffly electronic, the guitar distortion comes from a box -- and his voice is gravelly, giving this an odd distinction of feeling ragged but composed; it's a homemade digital album. If the songs aren't necessarily grabbers, it's hard to deny how personal
Rippin' Up Time feels, like a strong reflection of Davies' idiosyncratic soul. For better or worse, he's putting it all out there: his fallibilities, his strange obsessions, his fascination with the past and the future. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine