Powermad
[1989] Absolute Power
Powermad
[1989] Absolute Power

from the album Rotting on a Golden Throne
Clouds of smoke obscure your view of the stage, where amps are littered with empty glass bottles. The scents of sweat and spilled beer dance in your nostrils as five long-haired reprobates clad in denim and leather walk onto the stage, a swagger in their step and street tough bravado oozing from their pores. Looking to take in a show whilst sitting on your ass? Get fucked. Total Maniac expects you to be on your feet and moving, and if youâre not ready for that, why are you even here? These boys from Baltimore play a raucous brand of classic rock-meets-speed metal that lives somewhere between Motörhead, Mötley CrĂŒe, and Ted Nugent, delivering no-frills cheap thrills on sophomore effort Love Overdrive. So slap on your battle vest and steel-toe bootsâwhen adrenaline starts to flow, and youâre thrashing all around, youâve gotta be prepared to act like a Total Maniac.
Compared to Total Maniacâs self-titled debut, Love Overdrive veers more into the trad metal/rock ânâ roll lane than Total Maniacâs thrash ânâ roll stylings. While both albums showcase Total Maniacâs snotty disregard for authority and decorum, Total Maniac dedicated more attention to thrashy chugs and barked vocals. On Love Overdrive, the focus centers on sticky leads and hooky riffs over palm-muted riffing and abrasive grit. Love Overdrive also tones down what passed for technicality on their debut. Not that Total Maniac doesnât host capable musicians, but there are moments across the album where guitars and vocals sound like theyâre pushing just past their ability. Despite that, Love Overdrive features an enthusiastic embrace of freewheeling sin-dealing thatâs easy to appreciate.
What Total Maniac lacks in virtuosic prowess, they make up in impish pluck. With only twenty-seven minutes on tap, Love Overdrive never feels phoned in. Each moment sounds crafted to maximize fist-pumping carnage, from the âPanamaâ-meets-âWild Sideâ riffing in âLove Overdriveâ to the Phil Campbell-inspired soloing toward the end of âFlatline.â Itâs unclear which of Total Maniacâs guitarists takes the lead at any given point, but both Mike Brown and Nick Etson lay down earworm after earworm, frequently breaking away for a quick solo before snapping back to let vocalist Diamond Dustin regale you about hard living, hard loving, and hard rocking. Double-D doesnât lack conviction, although his upper range sometimes gets away from him. Itâs not a deal-breaker, as this sort of rowdy street metal lends itself to imperfect performances that enhance its DIY charm, but piercing falsettos occasionally hit like a sour King Diamond. As for the rhythm section, drummer Vaughn Volkman does a commendable job keeping Love Overdriveâs eight tracks on the rails, but itâs bassist Ben Martin who steals the show. His beefy grumbles and well-mixed countermelodies offset Total Maniacâs dual-guitar attack, creating a well-balanced stringed menace that defines my favorite aspect of Love Overdrive.
Though Total Maniac bleeds authenticity and fun, Love Overdrive does little to stake an identity that hasnât already been claimed. Many of the riffs seem like variations on Mötley CrĂŒeâs 80s heyday, with âEarly Graveâ echoing the main motif from âKickstart My Heartâ and the intro from âSet Fire to the Sunâ hitting the same mid-paced groove and brief bass sustains as âShout at the Devil.â The mid-song break in âDrinkinâ Our Way to Hellâ even reminds me of Nugentâs crackpot rant towards the end of âWango Tango.â In this way, Love Overdrive feels like a step back from Total Maniac, which was rougher around the edges, but better defined a unique voice for the band.
Total Maniac does a fantastic job of harnessing the spirit of the music I grew up listening to, but Love Overdrive rarely captures moments that achieve the promise of their inspirations. Fun abounds, and the music encourages beer-chugging shenanigans with a shit-eating grin, yet in the end Total Maniac leaves me wanting to revisit songs I already know rather than learn these new ones. Even so, itâs a quick listen worthy of a spin for anyone craving new material harkening to simpler times. I look forward to hearing where Total Maniac ventures next, and I hope they find a way to continue celebrating the glory of the past while sending their future into Overdrive.
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Rating: Mixed
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Self-Released
Websites: Bandcamp | Facebook
Releases Worldwide: March 27th, 2026