Lee Bains III & the Glory Fires Introduce Themselves with the Thunderous Dereconstructed

Published: July 19, 2014

Lee Bains III & the Glory Fires Band Photo

Some albums sneakup on you. You listen once, and shades of appreciation creep in, but the record’s true worth doesn’t come across until much later. Until you’ve listened to it over and over again, and suddenly you come to an understanding of what it’s about and how it works.Dereconstructed by Lee Bains III &the Glory Fires is not that kind of record.Dereconstructed starts with a blistering riff, grabs you by the throat, and proceeds to kick your ass with their potent blend of punk, Southern rock, and soul for roughly 35 minutes. Don’t be alarmed, this is a good thing.

Not thatthe album doesn’t have depth as well though. Sure, the intrinsic thrill of layers of fuzz and distortion oozing out of the speakers as two guitars grapple for supremacy is undeniable. Yes, the rhythm section is both forceful and nimble, with frenetic beats merging southern blues and punk supporting the low-end rummaging of the bass that’s both relentlessly physical and melodically graceful when it’s called for (check out the precision wrecking ball underpinning “What’s Good and Gone” especially). Then there’s the visceral joy of the sound taken together, a maxed out affair with a ragged production that gives every song a palpable grit. It sounds as if the album wasn’t recorded so much as melted down to a toxic sludge and smeared against your ears. It sounds sloppy, but as it’s done with an expert’s hand. Anyways, that’s all well and good, but what makes the album feel really special is how it sticks around with you.

Lyrically, Lee Bains proves himself an expert at balancing erudite and considered writing that sounds surprisingly natural. Listening to the impassioned and ragged delivery you wouldn’t expect striking imagery such as

But just consider the weeds downtown, and how they grow/How the Queen Anne’s Lace covers hot parking lots like snow”.

It’s even more fun when the waxing poetic turns vitriolic, like in “Flags!”,

Senior year, you could go deaf from all the talk of terrorists and Muslim fundamentalists/And I thought it strange in a town where so-called believers blew up womens clinics we had the gall to act so offended/And when it would come time to say the Pledge in class, I would sit my ass down at that desk/And the only words of it I said were under God, I figured we were beyond the help of anybody else.

The album is both seething indictment and impassioned support for the culture of the South and America at large, as it’s perceived, as it is, and as it’s warped and twisted for monetary gain. Not that you need to dig that deep to find something to like here, as I said, it’s thrilling on its own merits as a quality rock & roll album.

To keep it simple, if you ever wished the Drive-By Truckers and their ilk would just skip to the ragers, or wished that garage bands actually had something to say, or if you just need a daily dosage of riffage, this is a good place to start.

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