Produced by Joey Z and Brand New Sin
Released: 2006
Brand New Sin’s previous album Recipe for Disaster was one of the most over-rated CDs of 2005. Apart from one song, I couldn’t see the value in it at all. One year later the band delivered Tequila, which is an altogether different proposition. This is the album that everyone was telling me Recipe for Disaster was supposed to be. Brand New Sin plays heavier, dirtier and meaner than on the last outing, and Tequila is thus far more satisfying. All that time on the road hanging out with Zakk Wylde, Pepper Keenan and Lemmy really paid off and they proceeded to come out with a set that the first of those gentlemen would likely be proud to call his own. This is down home southern fried heavy rock, the type you might hear in a biker bar just before an epic fight breaks out, and then with the next track becomes the soundtrack to the fight.
“Said and Done” drifts in like the Man With No Name and then swings into action with a huge slab-like groove and “Did Me Wrong” follows with metallic riff-heavy rock. Then comes “Spare the Agony”, a moodier piece with a slow-building intro of clean guitar over a rumbling bass line. This one could well have come off Black Label Society’s Mafia set. “Old” has a real commercial hook but is far too heavy for radio to play and “Motormeth” is pure flat-to-the-floor rocking. Short segments of dark acoustic guitar are sprinkled through the album too, adding a sense of overall diversity, and it winds up with a really cool version of “House of the Rising Sun” that starts out as a nicely brooding blues before loudly kicking into top gear near the end.
Whatever they might have promised before that I felt they couldn’t deliver, Brand New Sin certainly brought it home this time.
- Said and Done
- Did Me Wrong
- Spare the Agony
- Ice Man
- The Proposition
- Old
- Worm Whore
- See the Sun
- Motormeth
- Numero Dos
- Elogio
- Reaper Man
- Acehole
- House of the Rising Sun
Rating: 85%
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