This idea of alien pursuers is a new one: In the past, Dexter Romweber has always played and sung like he had hellhounds on his trail. Whether performing and recording as half of the Flat Duo Jets or commanding a stage all by his lonesome, Romweber has always made a righteous racket that refused to be defined by something as trivial as the number of personnel.

Joined by drummer Sam โ€œCrash LaReshโ€ Sandler and a handful of one or two-shot guests, Romweber tears through 18 songs like a double-parked fugitive, style hopping across primal rock and its stepbrother, rockabilly, as well as surf and anything else cooked up in a garage sometime in the last 50 years. Actually, he does slow down twice: Once on the sweeping ballad, โ€œTo Lose You,โ€ one of 10 Romweber-penned tunes on the album, and again on the equally dramatic, album-closing version of Charlie Richโ€™s โ€œFeel Like Going Home.โ€ The rest of the time he can be found blasting out the Eddie Cochran instrumental โ€œGuybo,โ€ then following it with a near-skiffle version of The Whoโ€™s โ€œThe Seeker.โ€ (Clever pairing that one, when you remember The Whoโ€™s ear-rattling take on Cochranโ€™s classic, โ€œSummertime Blues.โ€) Elsewhere, Dex brings such names as Ben Hewitt (โ€œMy Searchโ€) or Sun Records rockabilly hero Johnny Carroll (โ€œRockinโ€™ Maybelleโ€) back into your lifeโ€“or, in my case, introduced me to them. Half of the originals are instrumentals, each with just the right amount of grease, roar, and/or tomfoolery. Special nods go to โ€œDo the Lurd!!โ€ with its Hasil Adkins-worthy title and โ€œWalkinโ€™ with Scary Hillbilly Monsters,โ€ the theme song to the drive-in movie of Joe Bob Briggsโ€™ dreams.

For now, letโ€™s pray that Romweber keeps moving and stays a half-step ahead of whatever it is thatโ€™s chasing him.