Jennifer Herrema has
RTX's avant-pop-metal down to a science, with her fierce, fearsome growl and guitar pyrotechnics taking the lead and rock-solid rhythms and peripheral weirdness backing them up. Her band's albums even have similar structures, putting the poppiest tracks first, then a ballad, then closing with a headbanging free for all of the heaviest songs.
JJ Got Live RaTX -- which, contrary to its name, is not a live album, although it rocks hard enough to pass for one -- follows the
RTX formula so precisely that it ends up being some of the band's most consistent music, almost to the point of being monochromatic. Where Western Xterminator and, especially,
Transmaniacon managed to be insanely rocking and varied,
JJ Got Live RaTX sticks mostly to a palette of heavy, heavy rock with few tangents. That's not to say that this is a boring album: the badass anthem "You Should Shut Up" begins
JJ Got Live RaTX with almost two minutes of synth and vocoder foreplay before it really kicks in with guitars that go beyond the hairiest of metal and Herrema's total shutdown of jive-talking fools, and the squealing, preening "How'd You Do It?" shows that Herrema hasn't lost the touch for pop-metal that she's shown since
Royal Trux's heyday. Like the
Trux,
RTX's heaviness is never ironic; they really mean it, but what they mean is often far from straightforward. They make
the Barbarians' "Are You a Boy or Are You a Girl" even more gender-bending, with Herrema singing about tight pants and long hair in a snarl that sounds more androgynous than ever. The album's lone ballad, "Cheap Wine Time," is another standout, equal parts
Stones-y strut and
GN'R power ballad pomp as it moves from drunken bliss to kiss-off, like a night of partying gone bad. However, by the second half of
JJ Got Live RaTX, it's hard to tell if the album is toploaded or if
RTX's dedication to nonstop rock is greater than their listeners'. While nothing gets quite as heavy as Western Xterminator -- although "Virgina Creeper"'s grind comes close -- tracks like "Birthday Song," "Hash" and "Mr. Wall" feel like parts of a larger, mega-metal piece, a slab of solos, and growling so dense that, after a while, it becomes strangely atmospheric. Even if
JJ Got Live RaTX doesn't show off everything
RTX can do, it still has enough pure hedonistic fun to satisfy fans. ~ Heather Phares