Rating:
Genre:
Rock
Release Date: 02/22/2005
In America, there are a lot more music fans who have no more than a vague idea of what
pub rock was than those who have an active working knowledge of the stuff. Philosophically,
pub rock was a U.K.-based precursor to
punk, but while
punk was the sound of kids smashing up
rock's formal structures and stripping them to the frame, the
pub bands were about taking
rock back to its breezy roots, celebrating the agrarian vibe of
the Band as much as the
roots rock energy of
Chuck Berry, and the music was meant to sound good played in a bar on a Friday night, accompanied by a few pints of beer.
Pub rock was also a strictly British phenomenon, and the
pub stars best known in America are those who later hitched their wagon to the
new wave a few years later, such as
Nick Lowe and
Ian Dury. Which is a large part of what makes
Elizabeth McQueen's second album,
Happy Doing What We're Doing, such a surprise -- born in Little Rock, AR, and currently calling Austin, TX, her home, the 20-something
McQueen got turned on to some of the classic British
pub rock bands by some friends, and on this disc she covers a dozen tunes, most by noted
pub acts, including
Ducks Deluxe,
Dr. Feelgood,
Eggs Over Easy, and
Brinsley Schwarz, as well as a few by such scene-followers as
Dave Edmunds,
Elvis Costello,
Graham Parker, and
Squeeze.
McQueen's affection for this music is obvious and infectious from the first cut to the last, and
McQueen and her band have a natural feeling for the roots-oriented
rock & roll that was what
pub was all about. Her sole original tune on this set,
"Dirty Little Secret," fits in just right and anyone who digs classic
pub rock sounds will like this. However, most of the performances seem just a shade off in feeling and attack compared to the originals, and
McQueen's lyrical gender shifts sometimes throw the songs into an odd relief. Still,
Happy Doing What We're Doing will encourage many fans to dig up the original of the many great tunes on board, and that qualifies this disc as a major public service.
~Mark Deming, All Music Guide