It is a tragic irony that Rowland S. Howard's finest solo work was released a mere two months before his untimely death from liver cancer -- he was waiting for a transplant. 
Howard wasn't exactly prolific after the 
Birthday Party split in the '80s. He worked a lot in that decade as a founding member of 
Crime & the City Solution fronted by 
Simon Bonney, and he collaborated with a host of artists including 
Nikki Sudden, 
Genevieve McGuckin, 
Barry Adamson, 
Jeremy Gluck and, most famously, 
Lydia Lunch. He also formed 
These Immortal Souls, who released a couple of excellent records. But 
Howard was largely silent after 1992, at least until the issue of his excellent 
Teenage Snuff Film in 2000. He was emerging from his long exile near the end of the decade with guest appearances before recording 
Pop Crimes in early 2009 with 
Mick Harvey on drums and organ, and 
J.P. Shilo on bass (save for a couple of tracks) and violin. The album is a slow, stellarly recorded collection of rough-'round-the-edges rock, with 
Howard in better voice and showing more energy than on any post-
Birthday Party record. The eight-song set includes two covers, including a fantastically moody, hypnotically expressive reading of 
Talk Talk's "Life's What You Make It." The originals reveal 
Howard in fine form as a "pop noir" songwriter, from the opener "(I Know) A Girl Called Jonny" (with 
Johnnie Standish on duet vocals) all the way through to  the album's true jewel "The Golden Age of Bloodshed," at its end, with plenty of stops between. On 
Pop Crimes, 
Howard's songwriting uses classic elements from early girl group rock, country, and film music, creating infectious melodies that are then often bent by his words to create mood, tension, and texture; they end up sounding temptingly dangerous: think 
Lee Hazlewood, 
Ennio Morricone, 
Doc Pomus, 
Lou Reed, 
Phil Spector, and 
Leon Payne all rolled into one. 
Howard was also a highly original guitarist whose style is inimitable and has proved influential; he was an architect of the 
Birthday Party's and 
Crime & the City Solution's sounds, and a real influence on the sonic beginnings of the 
Bad Seeds. That too, is on full display here: check the way he uses both 
James Burton and 
Duane Eddy in the title track, early-'60s girl group balladry filtered through Gothic country to create a suspenseful, dark sensuality in the opening cut; plodding  "Ghost Riders in the Sky"-esque country & western, loneliness, and thick wall of noise darkness in "Nothin'," and then there's the jumbled feedback, fragmented power chords, and slippery, sparse lead lines on "The Golden Age of Bloodshed" -- that also contains some fantastic violin playing from 
Shiloh and the finest lyrics in 
Howard's catalog. 
Pop Crimes may be 
Howard's last will and testament, but  as such it's a physically forceful, deeply emotive,  dramatic finish; full of memorable songs and unforgettable moments that make it a high-water mark in Australian rock.