Skip to content
Regular price $24.99

Shipping calculated at checkout

Out of stock

Please note:

ALL NEW: While we do our best to ensure that our images are up to date, if you are looking for a specific cover or specific color vinyl, please send us an email to verify before purchasing.

All USED: Pictures of the actual item are featured. What you see if what you get on those.

Supersuckers - Evil Powers Of Rock 'n' Roll LP

NEW. SEALED.

Reptilian Records

Continuing as the Cheap Trick of underground rock & roll, the Supersuckers' 1999 release, the band's fifth full-length (including its brief foray into honky tonk with Must've Been High), is appreciatively a more focused release than Sacrilicious. Part of that resides in the return of founding guitar player Ron Heathman, who remained absent for the recording of Sacrilicious due to drug problems. His return obviously resolidified the quartet, whose straightforward mixture of Nazareth, Thin Lizzy, the Ramones, and aforementioned Cheap Trick, is potently evident on this release. The abundantly talented twin-guitar attack of Ron Heathman and Dan Bolton approximates -- in a punk rock manner -- the soaring harmonies of Thin Lizzy's Scott Gorham and Brian Robertson. Given the directness and assurance these songs resonate with, it seems that the Supersuckers have overcome the tongue in cheek rock & roll irony inscribed in their earlier albums. What remains is a steel-solid, speedy rock band. Vocalist Eddie Spaghetti continues holding court like Jeff Spicoli from Fast Times at Ridgemont High; it's all drugs, women, high school schlock, gambling, the road, and good times delivered with a grin. Though the band never takes itself too seriously, they are a more than capable pop-driven four-piece. Songs like "Cool Manchu" and "Dirt Roads, Dead Ends, and Dust" allow the band to flex its twangy roots, while "I Want the Drugs" and "Stuff 'N' Nonsense" are perfect pieces of simple power pop.

x