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OVERKILL's D.D. VERNI Teams Up With REVEREND HORTON HEAT's JIM HEATH For 'Two Of A Kind' Single
#OVERKILL #VERNI #TeamsUpWith #album #newrelease #single #bassist #Blabbermouth #metal #music
#TheMetalDogArticleList
#Blabbermouth
OVERKILL's D.D. VERNI Teams Up With REVEREND HORTON HEAT's JIM HEATH For 'Two Of A Kind' Single
#OVERKILL #VERNI #TeamsUpWith #album #newrelease #single #bassist #Blabbermouth #metal #music
Verni â Dreadful Company Review
By Dolphin Whisperer
Few bands in the thrash business have remained as enjoyable through their dips and resurgences as New Jerseyâs very own gutter brigade Overkill. And since The Lubricunts dissolved to form that unsung thrash titan, bottom-rumbler D.D. Verni has been pluckinâ low and clangy under scooped riffs and snarled anthems for the better part of forty-four years, equally as integral to the Overkill grime as Bobby Blitzâs trash-tongued antics. So itâs understandable then that Verniâs output, being born of a mindâD.D. Verni performs everything hereâthat has reveled in riffs with a sticky crunch, has aimed to take a step back to roots, back to rock ânâ roll. After all, nothing says âhello from the gutterâ like a cranked amp shootinâ a power chord across the airwaves.
That louder-than-loud and windows-down philosophy builds the core, the cover, and crannies of what Verni offers with Dreadful Company. The second in line of Verniâs solo works, this newest sound collection lands on the heels on 2018âs Barricade, which saw thick-rhythm guitar music in the vein Queens of the Stone Age or the scuzzy drawl of Black Label Society. But it seems that between then and Dreadful Company, Verni himself decided that he needed to turn the dial back further to the sound of The Ramones-era punk, letting just a few chords and song-title choruses do the heavy lifting (almost every song up to âThanks for the Memoriesâ). Heck, with the spell-out sneer of âL-U-N-K-H-E-A-D, Lunkhead! Lunkhead!â (âLunkheadâ), Verni threatens to be damn near fun and wholesomeâa far cry from the dirt and spit image of his younger daysâat least until he letâs the Jersey out and turns call to âstupid fuckâ instead of âlunkhead.â
Of course, itâs natural for artists to evolve and work in different lanes, so all of these changes arenât wholly bothersome, not so much as Verniâs inability to cobble together a diverse assortment of tunes, anyway. If it werenât for those clearly audible title shouts, itâd be difficult to place where you are in the first twenty minutes through which Verni with bouncing yet predictable fervor. And yes, that is twenty minutes to prowl through five songs, which in this punk-worship lane is far too long. The tempo runs just a bit under what a snappy brawl might entail. The choruses follow cut-and-paste melodies between each other, reducing the impact of catchy phrases like âThe whore, the whore, the whore with see-through shooooesâ and âThanks for the memories, thanks for the memoriiiiesâ (âThe Whore with the See-Thru Shoes,â âThanks for the Memoriesâ). And Verni also borrows passages from classic works (âNa Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbyeâ in âThanksâŚ,â âPachelbelâs Canonâ in âCall of the Highwayâ), even tossing in a pointless cover of BachmanâTurner Overdriveâs âTakinâ Care of Business,â to no impact other than added time.
At least Verni knows how to keep performances tight and professional, though thatâs the least youâd expect of someone who has been at it this long. Yet in this niche of old-timey worship in which Dreadful Company lives, the lack of warmth and depth in the tones and production rings frustrating. In particular, a majority of songs present up-front with loud guitars, which isnât a problem on its own. But with the lack in character in its tone, this wall of sound blends into the same mass every time its present, despite the trademark bass underpinning. On âWild Horsesâ Verni takes a breather on this style to work in a classic blues rock lick that opens space tasteful rhythmic exploration and vocal harmonizationâVerniâs voice could use a bit more edge all-around, but itâs pleasant enough, especially when layered.
No one expected Verni to reinvent the wheel, but when the promise is rock, I at least want to roll. With a name as known as Overkill, itâs easy to form expectations, though. However, even when removed of that pedigree, Verniâs mission doesnât change: to deliver unbranded rock ânâ roll with a blush of toughness and grit enough to pare down the most glaring of snags. Faceless, formulaic, and frustrating, Dreadful Company plates a forty-five-minute experience that sums to far less than what peak radio rock would offer. And in a world where rock as a simple format must go against annals that run deep and wide with acclaim, Dreadful Company isnât enough to achieve any kind of repeated airplay.
Rating: 1.5/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: M-Theory Audio | Bandcamp
Websites: facebook.com/ddverni | ddverni.bandcamp.com
Releases Worldwide: July 26th, 2024
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