On a side note, who can resist the striking cover sharing
one of life’s delightful pleasures and the name Spencer Cullum Jr getting an
insert alongside a song title. Where you stand on the mayonnaise debate may be
irrelevant, but acknowledging one of Nashville’s premium pedal steel players,
probably best known for his longstanding role in Miranda Lambert’s touring
band, is a given. Therefore, enough inspiration began to surface to explore
this album.
Deer Tick ‘tick’ many boxes on the indie rock/alternative
Americana spectrum, but twang is not one of them. However, the addition of
Cullum’s steel to the final track ‘Cocktail’
brings it to life, enhancing the original tenfold and making it a super listen
ready to spice up many playlists when the entity of this album release fades.
‘Cocktail’ is one
of the four tracks on the album that have had a makeover since the last Deer
Tick record. That release in 2017 split across twin discs, simply labelled
Volume 1 and 2, and added to a considerable back catalogue spanning almost
twenty years. The other tracks are ‘Limp
Right Back’, ‘End of the World’
and ‘Doomed From the Start’.
Dedicated Deer Tick fans will no doubt voice opinion on the versions, the only
brief assertion offered here is marginal, but this a tasting exercise without
deep rooted authority.
Contributing to the interim status of this album are four
covers that emerge after proving live favourites from the gigs played promoting
the previous record. They come from diverse sources in George Harrison, The
Pogues and the Velvet Underground, with the fourth, ‘Too Sensitive For This World’ by Ben Vaughn requiring some Google
assistance. On the other hand, ‘White
City’, ‘Run of the Mill’ and ‘Pale
Blue Eyes’, all originally recorded by the aforementioned trio have a
degree of popularity to draw conflicting comparisons with Deer Tick’s version.
Without entering into serious debate, all four are good fit to what a newbie
can extract from assessing the value of MAYONNAISE.
To stir the mix more productively, five new songs have been
included. An act that can be contentious where fans feel a touch short -changed
when primarily drawn to a release based on progression rather than reflection.
Putting the
controversy to one side, the new tracks are a mixed bag: one superb, one experimental
and three standard fare. ‘Hey! Yeah!’
is the pick of the bunch: catchy, raucous and reminiscent of the Scorchers at
their post-punk best. This track did see the light of day last year, and at
least, has a Bandcamp home in addition to the video. ‘Memphis
Chair’ is a short instrumental piece and is a definite leftfield venture in
the context of this album. ‘Bluesboy’
opens the record and is about as heavy as you get among the tracks, in contrast
to the acoustic rock ballad existing within ‘Strange, Awful Feeling’ or the good old roots stomper ‘Old Lady’.
Has MAYONNAISE tempted further discovery into the work of
Deer Tick? Maybe with a prevailing wind, but even in its phase as a stand-alone
release it provides a fascinating listen, prompting many discussion points. So
if propelling a band forward is a goal for any record, this box has been ticked
and in a way to successfully court newbies.