Early punk's greatest glory, and greatest flaw, was
that most of the bands were signed before they'd reached true musical
proficiency. No wonder they sounded so unique -- they weren't capable of
imitating their influences yet. Not so with the Ruts,
who were able to deliver a powerful musical punch with their debut
album, something virtually unique among old-school British punk bands.
Easily able to recreate not just first-wave punk stylings, but classic
rock as well, the Ruts' influences ran the gamut of genres from Motörhead to Marley, the New York Dolls to the Banshees. Thus, The Crack
was one blindingly original album, far removed from its contemporaries.
At the core, the quartet's sound was based primarily on '70s rock,
played fast and hard, bringing them into the sphere of the street punks,
an evolving genre later tagged Oi!, and eventually mutating into both
speed metal and hardcore. The album features a clutch of headbanging
pogo-til-you-puke blasts of fury, anthemic shout-alongs one and all. But
the Ruts
were capable of much more than simplistic punk-rockers in a metal mode.
Some songs feature a wondrous gothic drone; "It Was Cold" was indebted
to both Magazine and the Police, while other tracks give nods to pub rock and R&B. Out of this mass of sounds and styles, the Ruts
hammered out intriguing hybrids, darkly shadowed, but occasionally
emerging into the pop light. "Dope for Guns," for example, weds a hard
rock verse to an anthemic poppy chorus, then ties the knot with a reggae
riff, while "Is It Something That I Said" pushes toward Buzzcocks
territory. The seminal "Jah War," inspired by the Southall riots, is
simmering roots reggae/dub, but seared by classic rock guitar leads,
totally redefining the rockers genre. The group was, if anything, even
stronger lyrically. "Babylon's Burning" turns a powerful punk-rocker
into an epic, with singer Malcolm Owen
capturing the anger, frustration, and horror of anyone caught up in a
riot. On "Jah War," he deliberately cools his passions, giving the words
more nuanced power than if he allowed his anger to break free. On the
sinister "S.U.S.," a response to England's infamous stop and search law,
the group combines to create an ominous atmosphere of paranoia, a sound
more chilling than that of any modern black metal band. The CD reissue
also includes the B-sides from the group's three singles, the dub-heavy
"Give Youth a Chance," the slamming, if somewhat silly "I Ain't
Sophisticated," and the jokey "The Crack," where more excellent dub is
interspersed with the group's rather amusing take on early rock &
roll
aCá.
aCá.
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