This debut from
Fatso Jetson of Palm Desert, CA, is as refreshingly direct and uncareerist as rock can get. Guitarist/vocalist
Mario Lalli, bassist
Larry Lalli, and drummer
Tony Tornay bring their own surf, punk, and country angles to the psychedelic explorations on
Stinky Little Gods. Fans curious about stoner rock's heritage would do well to check out this and every recording from desert rock godfathers the Lalli cousins, who influenced stoner superheroes
Kyuss while playing in desert bar bands like Englenook and Yawning Man. Fans of
Josh Homme's fluid soloing on
Kyuss and
Queens of the Stone Age discs will enjoy and recognize the guitar stylings on "Corn on the Macabre," just one of the five instrumental tracks that reveal Lalli's talent for combining punk anti-music with all out jam rock to create the big, primal, desert sound.
Mario Lalli's vocal approach differs significantly from many of the genres subsequent practitioners. Eschewing '70s blues riffs,
Mario Lalli's voice and lyrics echo his punk influence as strongly as his guitar playing reflects surf and psychedelia. Taking the apocalyptic imagery to comedic extreme, "Kettle of Doom" sums up
Fatso Jetson's half-serious lyrical message: "Losing streak, bad plan, leave it out, your Loss, flush it down." What seems like random negativity actually comes off as clever and distinctive when
Mario Lalli's one-note imagery combines with
Fatso Jetson's regional blend of surf, punk, and hard rock. With its intelligence, modesty, and musical commitment,
Stinky Little Gods more than confirms
Fatso Jetson's towering influence over the most artistic movement in heavy rock since it's post-psychedelic '70s inception.