Road to Ruin
Best song: most of them, but I’ll stick with the obvious
answer of I Wanna Be Sedated
Worst song: She’s the One
Overall grade: 6
The Ramones’ fourth album is both very familiar and very
new. It gets off to an unsurprising start with the fast, energetic guitar riff
of ‘I Just Want To Have Something To Do’, and it’s not until Joey starts
singing that you realise quite how much development there has been since the
last album. With Tommy Ramone out of the drummer’s chair (replaced by some guy
called Marky, who sounds pretty similar) and now behind the scenes producing,
things just sound different – the melody is emphasised more, and the anger,
while still ever-present, has become more subtle. It’s really working for them.
They never move into any kind of sickly-sweet pop; the guitar is too
animalistic for that and the vocals too hard around the edges, but every song
overflows with hooks and giant sing-along choruses. And while the record as a
whole still gets samey in places, when a song gets stuck in your head (and it
will) you’ll know exactly which one it is.
Songs such as ‘I Don’t Want You’ prove they’re finally
taking this music business thing seriously. It doesn’t have many lyrics, but
the delivery is a thousand times more sincere than anything on previous
records. And a couple of the songs, like ‘I Wanted Everything’, break the three
minute mark! That’s how you know they mean business.
The group seem more willing to experiment with ideas now,
and there’s a slight country influence on ‘Don’t Come Close’, a great song
which feels like something that would be played over the closing credits of a
film. The influence is there too on ‘Questioningly’, but that track is more
notable for being the band’s attempt at a solemn, honest love song. It’s the
biggest surprise of the album in that it’s actually very successful! The
slowed-down playing doesn’t lose any of the life that the faster numbers have,
and the lyrics are good even though they’re frank and not hidden behind their
usual veil of humour.
Further showing how these guys are moving on is ‘I’m Against
It’. It almost seems like, dare I say it, a purposeful self-parody, taking the
nihilism that defines punk and using it in such an extreme way that it becomes
comical. I like how they’re not afraid to laugh at themselves and that they’re
not trying to distance themselves from the whole punk scene, and I like the
song too, especially Joey’s super-intense growling of the lyrics.
‘I Wanna Be Sedated’ has become one of the band’s best-known
songs, despite originally being released as a b-side. Again, the fact that it’s
based on a true story (Joey Ramone struggling to cope with the Ramones’ frantic
touring) gives it more gravity, but the subject matter never tries to overwhelm
the song, which stays fun all the way through.
The downside to the band’s new maturity is that the
throwaway material is much easier to spot – ‘She’s the One’ is a blatant piece
of filler that would have fit in better on one of the previous records, but
still would have been one of the weaker tracks. And then ‘Needles and Pins’ is
an acceptable cover, but just when their own songs are getting so awesome, I’m
not sure it’s really needed.
But apart from those two, there’s nothing to bring this
album down, unless you’re one of those people who believes that taking the
music in this direction was the Ramones ‘selling out’. It’s not. This is the
exact opposite of selling out! (I’m not sure what that is, though… pretty sure ‘selling
in’ is not a term) This is the band becoming more artistically creative, more
willing to experiment, and if it happened to sell them a few records, well, so
much the better. I can’t see why old-time fans who are devoted to the first
three albums dismiss this one when it has songs like ‘Bad Brain’ on it,
something which takes the best elements of the early records and makes them
better, or ‘I Just Want To Have Something To Do’ which is basically just a more
technically interesting version of their past stuff.
This wasn’t the first Ramones album I heard, but it was the
one that made me see what all the fuss was about when it comes to them, and I
still see it as their absolute high point of studio output – the moment when
their punk and pop worlds collided in a glorious explosion.
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