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Fudge Sandwich
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Fudge Sandwich
Current price: $16.99
Barnes and Noble
Fudge Sandwich
Current price: $16.99
Size: CD
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When an artist who usually records their own material decides to release a set of covers, it often means that they've run short on ideas and inspiration. That hardly seems to be the case with
Ty Segall
, who was relentlessly prolific in 2018;
Fudge Sandwich
, in which he bends 11 tunes by 11 artists to his creative will, is one of five albums he released that year. But if
Segall
wanted to take on other people's tunes for a change,
shows he can do so and put the firm stamp of his personality on each of them. Right out of the box,
's lurching, ominous reworking of
War
's blissfully funky "Low Rider" demonstrates that following the template of the originals was not part of the game plan here. The same goes for his take on
the Dils
' "Class War," which turns the anti-capitalist punk anthem into an earnest exercise in folk rock.
approaches these songs in ways that are distinctly different than the originals, but for the most part, he still captures their underlying mood. He transforms
Neil Young
's "The Loner" into a fast, buzzy garage punk tantrum, but the protagonist's alienation is as clear as ever, and while his mega-distorted, gear-shifting amble through
the Grateful Dead
's "St. Stephen" isn't as contemplative as the original, but it remains just as inward-looking and maybe a bit trippier. It's hard not to love the righteous stomp of
's glam rock makeover of
Funkadelic
's "Hit It and Quit It" (keep in mind
George Clinton
had a soft spot for hard rock guitars), and the spare, deeply felt cover of
John Lennon
's "Isolation" is one of the few examples of
honoring both the sound and mindset of the original and making it work.
didn't write any of the songs on
, but these performances are as much his as anything that's come from his pen, and if you still need to be convinced that he's one of the freest and most adventurous minds in contemporary rock & roll, this might just do the trick. ~ Mark Deming
Ty Segall
, who was relentlessly prolific in 2018;
Fudge Sandwich
, in which he bends 11 tunes by 11 artists to his creative will, is one of five albums he released that year. But if
Segall
wanted to take on other people's tunes for a change,
shows he can do so and put the firm stamp of his personality on each of them. Right out of the box,
's lurching, ominous reworking of
War
's blissfully funky "Low Rider" demonstrates that following the template of the originals was not part of the game plan here. The same goes for his take on
the Dils
' "Class War," which turns the anti-capitalist punk anthem into an earnest exercise in folk rock.
approaches these songs in ways that are distinctly different than the originals, but for the most part, he still captures their underlying mood. He transforms
Neil Young
's "The Loner" into a fast, buzzy garage punk tantrum, but the protagonist's alienation is as clear as ever, and while his mega-distorted, gear-shifting amble through
the Grateful Dead
's "St. Stephen" isn't as contemplative as the original, but it remains just as inward-looking and maybe a bit trippier. It's hard not to love the righteous stomp of
's glam rock makeover of
Funkadelic
's "Hit It and Quit It" (keep in mind
George Clinton
had a soft spot for hard rock guitars), and the spare, deeply felt cover of
John Lennon
's "Isolation" is one of the few examples of
honoring both the sound and mindset of the original and making it work.
didn't write any of the songs on
, but these performances are as much his as anything that's come from his pen, and if you still need to be convinced that he's one of the freest and most adventurous minds in contemporary rock & roll, this might just do the trick. ~ Mark Deming