Blind Mellon meets the Red Elvises in Kingston
author: Vuk in Michigan
I've had the EP for a few years and love it. Never gets tiresome. Alterations to a couple of tracks that were carried over at first annoyed me, but I have since adapted and moved on with my life. The little Booker-T-&-the-MG's bit caught me by surprise but I'm diggin' it now. This is great getting drunk on a deck music. The takin-it-back track is pretty tight as is either 5 or 6. There is a lot of variety on this CD while still keeping the same smooth vibe going.
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This is one tight, bare-bones three-piece unit, with some solid grooves - throug
author: Francesco Emmanuel
This rock-reggae trio hails from Minneapolis and play their own smooth version of ska, blues, jazz and funk. Informal Moronic is Jack Ruby’s follow-up to their 2003 debut, Jack Ruby: EP
The album begins with the guitar, pumping on that wah effect and repeating a riff that makes you wanna bop your head, the bass follows note for note. Lead singer/guitarist Nicholson Kenny begins crooning in a rather bluesy voice. That is the first thing that struck me listening here, the fact that Kenny sounds natural, not like someone trying really hard to ‘sing’ reggae. So many artists nowadays want to affiliate themselves with the heartland of reggae that they forget to just
be themselves.
The next good thing is, it’s not just a rock-reggae record, there’s elements of blues, jazz, funk and rock ‘n’ roll. Tracks like ‘So Surreal’ and ‘Strange World’ lay on the roots, rock, reggae groves thick. Then there’s the almost progressive/funk rock ‘Well Adjusted’ which closes Informal, always good to finish with a kick, leave the listener wanting more.
The sound of the guitar is monumental here, the thin, dry and dirty tone of that fender strat (at least, it sounds like a strat to me, but I may be wrong) rings through the record, gives the music a good punch, and defines the band as not just another ‘ska group’. Kenny’s tasteful solo playing adds just enough texture and variety to take songs along their musical journey.
This is one tight, bare-bones three-piece unit, with some solid grooves - throughout the record the bass and drums really gel great together. These guys have taken an old formula, muddied it up a little bit, fused it with the blues, and created some fine tunes here.
Inasmuch as I prefer ‘old school reggae’ I was thoroughly impressed with the skanking ideals of Jack Ruby and their Informal Moronic.
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This is a tight knit, highly coherent album fusing many different music styles.
author: Samba Mamma
Description first eluded me. It's been a long time since I've heard an album that stuck to its sound and theme as well as Informal Moronic does. An easy going, smooth, reggae-jazzy rock rythm underlies the whole album. Jack Ruby shifts riffs and rythms effortlessly on this album, creating a treasure trove of catchy tunes that you'll find yourself humming when you least expect it.
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