
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 โCrash 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, โTo Lose You,โ one of 10 Romweber-penned tunes on the album, and again on the equally dramatic, album-closing version of Charlie Richโs โFeel Like Going Home.โ The rest of the time he can be found blasting out the Eddie Cochran instrumental โGuybo,โ then following it with a near-skiffle version of The Whoโs โThe Seeker.โ (Clever pairing that one, when you remember The Whoโs ear-rattling take on Cochranโs classic, โSummertime Blues.โ) Elsewhere, Dex brings such names as Ben Hewitt (โMy Searchโ) or Sun Records rockabilly hero Johnny Carroll (โRockinโ Maybelleโ) back into your lifeโor, 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 โDo the Lurd!!โ with its Hasil Adkins-worthy title and โWalkinโ with Scary Hillbilly Monsters,โ the theme song to the drive-in movie of Joe Bob Briggsโ dreams.
For now, letโs pray that Romweber keeps moving and stays a half-step ahead of whatever it is thatโs chasing him.


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