Whether it was the infamous rabble rousers of the 1970s or the 21st century gang of old rockers who clung to those sleazy ideals yesteryear, the 
Hollywood Vampires were known for one thing: debauchery. It was a good time, but only if you were part of the inner circle. The 
Vampires roamed through the bars of L.A. in the '70s and the group -- anchored by 
Alice Cooper, 
Joe Perry, and 
Johnny Depp -- sought to resurrect that same sense of hedonistic anarchy on their 2015 album. Part of the trick with that record is that they relied on tunes from the time, which gave the record a sense of a high-end jam session when a bunch of fellow stars decided to drop into the studio. The 
Hollywood Vampires flip that equation on 
Rise, relying on original material from 
Cooper, 
Perry, and 
Depp. Covers are still here, usually sung by 
Depp as if he was whiling away a Wednesday night at a Sunset Strip karaoke bar: he rambles through 
David Bowie's "Heroes" and recites 
Jim Carroll's "People Who Died" with a glassy-eyed affect. 
Perry steps in front of the mike for a by-the-book version of 
Johnny Thunders' "You Can't Put Your Arms Around a Memory," which leaves a lot of space for 
Alice Cooper to cavort and camp. "We Gotta Rise," the record's neo-title track, is a winking rallying call to overthrow, and "Welcome to the Bushwackers" is an absurd shuffle that finds room for a lithe 
Jeff Beck solo. He's the only true guest here -- 
John Waters is credited on "Bushwackers," but it's impossible to hear him -- and that reduced guest list indicates how 
Rise doesn't much feel like a party. Not only were there not many musicians hanging in the studio this time, but all of 
Rise seems stitched together on the computer, with each of the three core members doing their part when they cleared time in their schedule. The result is a drag, the sound of a revelers who have no idea that it's well past time for them to head on home.