Recorded at Shepherd's Bush Empire in London in May of 2006, the reunion of the original Australian wild boys -- now men --
the Scientists proved to be a vehicle for the band's seminal lineup of
Kim Salmon, Tony Thewlis, Boris Sudjovic, and Brett Rixon to resume operations at least as a touring entity in 2007. This live album attests to why that's true. Eleven tracks worth of classic
Scientists material are here, from "Swampland," "Burnout," "Nitro," and "Blood Red River" to "Leadfoot," "We Had Love," "Rev Head," and "Set It on Fire" (11 songs in 45 minutes). It's as if they set out to make a definitive greatest-hits record, and most of these versions top the originals by an outback mile with ragged, swampy max volume with blast and throb intensity. Who the hell knew they still had it in them? This is two Aussie bands who have reunited and made live appearances that kick the living shit out of their much younger American contemporaries. For those unaware of
the Scientists, they come from Perth Australia, and were four disillusioned, drunken, doped up kids with guitars and fast cars who set out to make a racket in a town that had never heard one. Inspired by the noise of
the Stooges,
the MC5,
Alice Cooper,
Blue Cheer,
Suicide, and a ton of other American rawk acts from the '60s, they did it and carved out a sound that was copied to the point that people don't even know the source of it anymore. Insipid alienated whiney indie rock this ain't. This is ugly, brutal, bluesed-out rock & roll from another planet.
Link Wray would have understood
the Scientists, so would
Lux and
Ivy from
the Cramps;
Ron Asheton gets them, so did
Mudhoney,
Jon Spencer,
Sonic Youth, fellow Aussies
Dirty Three and
Nick Cave. This is music that has to hit your body for you to actually encounter it fully, and you should. Anyone interested in the wild aspect of rock & roll, the untamed, savage fury and lust of its true hellbent spirit should give this one a shot. Those who dug the band back when; your suspicions have not been confirmed. This is
the Scientists at their furious best. ~ Thom Jurek