As of 2011, three and a half decades had passed since a 22-year-old
Greg Ginn founded the influential punk rock band
Black Flag in 1976.
Ginn's album
We Are Amused cannot be called punk rock, and, as its facetious group name "the Royal We" suggests, it is not the work of a band, either.
Ginn applies the term "the Royal We" to himself to indicate that this is a one-man project on which he has played all the instruments. But if the music is not punk rock, it is still identifiable as rock. On each of the nine lengthy instrumental tracks,
Ginn sets up a simple pattern of, say, six ("Laundering Reality") or eight ("Morning in the South") notes, played on an electric guitar or a keyboard, over a steady rhythm section. He also employs a theremin on several selections for an eerie, slide guitar-like effect. The music is certainly trippy, if not exactly psychedelic since, to call rock psychedelic usually implies that there are long, virtuosic solos.
Ginn isn't so much interested in instrumental virtuosity as he is in layering sounds within constant rhythmic constructs. This isn't dance music, either, despite the constancy of the beats. The tracks have a trance-inducing effect, especially given their lengths, which get close to 11 minutes in one case. The music is engaging, but at the same time uncompromising, which, come to think of it, also could have been said of
Black Flag. ~ William Ruhlmann