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How much can one fan of OKOM (Our Kind Of Music) accomplish in just a couple of years? Plenty, if it's Rockzilla, aka photographer Michael Johnson. From 2003 to 2005, rockzilla.net was a chronicle of the alt.country scene from a uniquely Texan perspective. But all good things must end, and Rockzilla has retired from the online 'zine scene.

This mirror site was copied from the rockzilla.net site with the express permission of Rockzilla hisself. If you don't believe me, go to the KHYI-Fans email list and ask him! Buddy will back me up, too.


 

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 Shining a light upon music that matters

 

John Doe
Forever Hasn't Happened Yet
Yep Roc Records
By Marianne Ebertowski

Somewhere back in 1977 songwriter and bassist John Doe met his sweetheart Exene Cervenka at a poetry workshop in Venice, California and soon after a band was born that rocked not only the L.A. punk scene, but found an eager audience everywhere young kids were hunkering for exciting music: X. In the early eighties Doe and Cervenka teamed up with Dave Alvin to form a side project, the rootsier Knitters. Later in the nineties, the fun seemed to be over. The bands split, Doe and Cervenka divorced. But, luckily, that is not the end of the story. Cervenka continued to make solo albums and concentrated on poetry, whereas John Doe became an actor (remember Boogie Nights?) and continued his musical career as a solo artist as well.

Forever Hasn't Happened Yet is Doe's fifth and best solo-effort. It's a spooky blues album with a shot of country and rock'n'roll that is spiced with the vocal (and in some cases also instrumental) presence of Dave Alvin, Grant Lee Philips, Neko Case, Kristin Hersh, Cindy Lee Berryhill and Smokey Hormel (Johnny Cash, Beck, Tom Waits). Doe's 16-year-old daughter makes her singing debut on "Mama Don't" and she does it with style, the sort of style, actually, that is reminiscent of a young Exene Cervenka. The album is about sex and drugs and life and death and, most of all, the road and the songs sound like X's songs sounded all those years ago; as if they come from at least six feet under the floorboard.

Doe handed the bass over to David J. Carpenter who already performed on Dim Stars, Bright Sky and concentrates on playing acoustic, electric and slide guitar. What surprises most, however, is his singing performance. No longer the punk rocker (he never really was ­ at least not as a vocalist), his voice sounds warm and versatile. Highlights of the album are his acoustic duet with Grant Lee Philips, "Twin Brother," an eerie childhood memory of the sort you rather forget once you're an adult, "Hwy5," a fast and ferocious road song co-written with Cervenka and co-sung with Neko Case and the closer "Repeat Performance," a heartwarming duet with Cindy Lee Berryhill.

FHHY is hard and fast at times, gentle and slow at other moments, passionate and challenging throughout the entire 31 minutes and eleven seconds it lasts. It is an intriguing album that grows on you every time you listen to it. It is the sort of album you want to play as loud as possible whenever you are desperately in need of goose bumps and you are keen to share them with your neighbors.

www.yeproc.com

Contact Marianne Ebertowski at ebertowski-at-rockzilla.net

 

  
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