Comprising three sets of live British radio sessions,
Sessions is an interesting leap through three eras of
Carter the Unstoppable Sex Machine's existence. With varying success. The best songs -- the early, 1991 session -- demonstrate a hint of the band's furious live energy but is ridden down by the fact that a "two guys and a drum machine" situation can only go so far in a radio station's studio (apart from some terrifically wrangled vocals, they all sound very similar to the original album cuts). The middle 1994 session -- showing off tracks from the band's Starry Eyed and Bollock Naked B-sides collection -- fares better with a hammering version of "Alternative Alf Garnett" and an even more spiteful take of "Commerical Flippin' Suicide" (not the original title). This particular session proves that the inclusion of the new drummer Wez to
Carter's lineup was clearly a live benefit for the band. Regardless, the last 1997 session (not the group's most stable period) shows off an added three new members to the band and these tracks probably sound the most successful. "Johnny Cash" soars with lo-fi subtlety and "Nowhere Fast" becomes almost more of a slice of infectious acoustica than ever before. So disregarding how it lacks immense live diversity, this collection remains more interesting in how it shows off the development of a band rather than in how it might pass the time for collectors. In other words, while
Sessions is definitely not a breakthrough example of the group's highs, it's still a nice, light-speed jolt through a piece of
Carter history. ~ Dean Carlson