Dirty Power
Bottom of the Hill, 1233 17th St. (at
Missouri), S.F.
www.bottomofthehill.com
10 p.m. on Saturday, April 26
With the Hitch and Floating Goat
Tickets are $7
621-4455
The bruising opener, "LSD," wastes little time in establishing the band's ass-kicking agenda. Patrick Goodwin (aka Patrock of Pansy Division fame) and Steve Perrone lock up on chugging guitar chords as Goodwin flexes his vocal muscles. Alternating between a tuneful growl and an impressive metallic wail, the singer delivers memorable melodies with a ballsy ferocity that most wannabe hard-rock vocalists would kill for. Whether sprinting through the high-octane, almost punk-metal workout of "Drag You Down" or riding the slow, AC/DC-style crunch of "Hey Superman," Goodwin consistently comes up with infectious choruses that stick stubbornly in your head.
Seattle studio maven Jack Endino (Nirvana, Soundgarden, countless others) lends a hand to the recording, engineering a warm analog thickness that enhances the chunky guitars and the burly rhythms pounded out by bassist Nick Ulman and drummer Jeff Potts. Still, the excellent production wouldn't mean much if the album didn't feature solid tunes. The twin-guitar attack of Perrone and Goodwin nods to AC/DC, Thin Lizzy, and Kiss, mixing tandem riffs and sweetly harmonized leads to help construct catchy, headbanging originals like "Penny Eyes" and "Gone." Forget about the garage rock re-re-revival; Dirty Power could single-handedly resurrect the arena-metal anthem in all its mulletheaded glory.
