Press For
Creepy
Little Noises |
 |
I Can Lick Any SOB in the House? Who on Earth
would proudly carry such an ostentatious -- some might say, repellant
-- moniker? A bunch on juvenile wannabes? A novelty act, perhaps?
If not, then who? The guilty party is one Mike Damron, who with his
brawny backing band has created one of the most intelligent and compelling
country-rock albums this reviewer has ever had the pleasure of smashing
stuff to. Damron aches his way through 10 songs of unadulterated ramblings,
effortlessly fitting the swamp-country mould with its honesty and
realism. Damron has no qualms exposing his frailties ("Swing Man Swing"),
misdirected affections ("Creepy Little Noises" and "Walk Across Texas")
and tragic childhood ("Hey Big Man" and "Saturday"), and doing so
with such a well worn, beaten-by-life baritone adds an affecting charm
to his songs. The album is often hard to listen to with the singer
bleeding into every song his passionate personality. He comes across
as somewhat of a beer-stained messiah, entirely upfront and unafraid
to comment on life, love and social and political injustice, easily
leading his audience to believe he could very well "lick" just about
anyone he comes across, on or off stage, SOB or not. Powerful and
resonant, smart and satisfying, this ain't no novelty act.
-- Nikki Tranter
BACKFIRE
Dec. 02 – Feb. 03
Ever since the Replacements’
1991 demise, hundreds of bands have tried their luck—with varying
degrees of success—in carrying the Minneapolis legends’
punk-meets-Americana torch. I Can Lick Any Sonofabitch In The House,
a Portland, Ore.-based outfit, has quite possibly done the best job
to date in re-creating the Mats’ recipe of fire and angst with
their new CD, Creepy Little Noises. Borrowing their moniker
from bare-knuckle boxer John L. Sullivan’s biography, I Can
Lick (there, I’ve shortened it), fronted by raspy voiced Mike
Damron, mix it up just enough to avoid a “rip-off” label—the
band occasionally sidesteps the middle-men Replacements and jingle-jangle
their way straight through Gram Parsons-inspired Stones territory
(“Whose to Blame,” “Walk Across Texas”). However,
Damron’s gritty, demon-exorcising tales of a troubled, lonely
childhood—the amazing “Saturday” and “Hey
Big Man”—are pure Westerberg, and the suicide ode-title
track could have easily been written for Tim or Let It Be. Imitation
is often an irritating form of flattery, but this disc is so lyrically
and musically mesmerizing the I Can Lick’s influences are soon
overshadowed by their talent. Damron’s two-pack-a-day delivery
might urge the listener to send the man some Luden’s, but you
get used to it after the first couple of listens of this riveting
record. (Steve
Sav)
High
Bias, 12/02
The problem with most roots rock artists is
that they're too polite. Constrained by fan expectations and their
own deep respect for American music traditions, too many roots rockers
treat country, blues and rockabilly as sacrosanct forms not to be
futzed around with or applied to anything but reserved emotional states.
Even songs about killers make the villains out to be sedate and possessing
the finest manners.
Fortunately, not all roots rockers forget
the art of being rude. For instance, the awkwardly but appropriately
monikered I Can Lick Any Sonofabitch in the House sounds like it crawled
out of the bar with an arm in its teeth and a knife in its back on
Creepy Little Noises. Frontperson Mike D. sings in a voice so grizzled
even his larynx must have tattoos on it, and his country rockin' songs
leave nothing to the emotional imagination, whether he's dealing with
anger, fear, despair or something more tender. "The barrel tastes
good in his mouth," he raspily croons in the title track, "He's gonna
go out like he came in/All alone." Not much false sentiment here;
even the more whimsical material like "Saturday," which celebrates
the titular day of play while noting "Mama, you won't hit me again,"
has a dark edge. For all the crazed energy permeating the record,
there's a sense of craft here; "Graveyard Song," "Walk Across Texas"
and "Swing Man Swing" display a strong sense of melody and a close
attention to grimy detail that belies the spontaneity of the performances.
Creepy Little Noises sounds like the raging drunk at the end of the
bar, but that drunk has the soul of a poet.
Michael Toland
Oregonian,
11/22/02
'Creepy
Little Noises' album is gritty soundtrack to pained life
While "Creepy Little Noises" is
the full-length debut CD release from Portland band I Can Lick Any
S.O.B. in the House, it also seems an important release of another
kind for frontman Mike Damron.
Exploring his inner demons, Damron reflects
openly on his personal life and the world as he sees it, resulting
in an album that is more heart-wrenching and moving than its title
might imply.
Which is not to take away from his Portland
band's rock 'n' roll factor. The group's certainly got the energy
found only in the devil's music. Bent by a muddy country-western
influence, the quintet has down-home, back-porch flavor, too. It's
just that listening to "Creepy Little Noises," you also
get depth and a small peek into the main man behind the music. The
meeting of fervent musicians and honest subject matter yields story-backed
sounds that are powerful and likable.
The band members -- singer-guitarist Damron,
guitarist-keyboard player-producer Jon Burbank, bassist Dewey Revelle,
harmonica player David Lipkind and drummer Flapjack Texas -- invent
a sound that can stomp and strut, coo and confess, growl and hiss
all at once. While dishing out colorful variety, I Can Lick Any
S.O.B. in the House paints a rumbling soundscape of sunsets and
tumbleweeds.
Like a letter to his father or a journal
entry just to vent the pain, Damron's "Hey Big Man" is
a touching acoustic track that has no reservations about conceding
his personal hardships. His Steve Earle-like singing is low and
gravely, revealing his struggles within: "Hey big man/Did you
ever give a damn about me?/I did not understand, you see/Why'd you
wanna hurt me."
Also reflecting on childhood is the jangly
jump-around of "Saturday," which contains a more upbeat
remembrance, perhaps about an escape from his own home and from
a mother who was no more nurturing than the father: "Mama oh
mama/Now where have you been?/Down at the Tahiti lounge/Just drinking
again."
Here's to the willingness to let it all
out, and the courage to do so. (JENNY TATONE)
ink19.com,
10/02
Portland kicks ass, okay? I mean, we have
the world's most dysfunctional NBA team, the country's nicest transportation
system, lots of beautiful parks for the runaway kids to squat in,
lots of seedy heroin dives, and a Chinese food restaurant called Hung
Far Low. Or at least we did when I grew up there. I last lived there
16 years ago. I live in Wisconsin now, and I miss the PDX.
Especially when there are kick-ass alt.blues.country
acts like I Can Lick Any Sonofabitch in the House still there. This
debut record from ICLASOBITCH is pretty much all the work of one guy,
the very very confident Mike Damron. This guy is working all sides
of the street: bluesy roots-rock ("Graveyard Song"), dragged-up-from-the-depths
personal pop-rock that sounds like bonus tracks left off Let It Be
by the 'Placemats ("Swing Man Swing"), and death ballads (the title
track). And that's just the first four songs!
Look: Damron is a huge huge talent. His songwriting
says a little too much -- does he really need to describe himself
mouldering in the grave? Does he really need to call a track "Fear'd"
and then sing about how he ain't a-feared? -- but hey, it's a first
album, cut my homey a break. And his punky whiskey-flavored soulful
voice and John Mellencamp-esque chord changes (and that is SO not
an insult in any way... Mellencamp's chord structures are amazing)
sell every single song.
But even if the rest of the album -- which
includes love songs and cheatin' songs too -- wasn't so great, two
songs would completely justify you getting this record NOW. They are
both focused on the physical abuse of children, but they couldn't
be more different. The first one is "Saturday," an outwardly jovial
burner about a nine-year-old who hangs with his grandparents having
fun that day every week: Captain Crunch, baseball on TV, plastic army
men, watching The Cars on Midnight Special with Wolfman Jack, the
whole nine yards. Only after you listen to it a couple of times do
you hear the lines dealing with WHY he's so happy to be there: "Close
my eyes, count three, and pray / Mama you ain't gonna hit me again."
Whiplash!
And the closer is a chill-inducing indictment
called "Big Man." In this piece, Mike D.'s narrator calls out a father
for being a big huge asshole to his five-year-old self: "And I will
survive you / Hallelujah! / And I will love bigger than you / And
I won't do all the bullshit you did do" (and here the pauses are crucial)
"I will not be a big man / I will not be a big man / Like you!" Yeah,
brother, testify! I'm right there with ya. To hell with that old bastard,
he wasn't shit, you're a better man, keep on walking and hold your
head up. Wow I love that song.
It's a good album. A little short, and a little
too calculated in places, but I Can Lick... is gonna be huge real
soon.
musicemissions.com,
10/21/02
I Can Like Any Son of a bitch In The House (hereforth
known simply as Sonofabitch) is a Portland Oregon based band led by
Mike Damron. He took the title of his band from the the biography of
boxer John L. Sullivan, and he also leads the album off with a track
called "John L. Sullivan". Sonofabitch is a noisy affair that takes
cues from rock-a-billy as well as country, while keeping one foot in
the blues. Mike's vocals are very gruff and the lyrics are rough around
the edges. Think Keith Richards and you sort of have the voice down,
and if Keith sang a more folky style then he would be just like Mike.
They could also be compared to Social Distortion but not as much punk.
There are some fairly mellow tracks on the album like the title track
and "Swing Man Swing" and they are along the lines of a Steve Earle
tune. Creepy Little Noises is actually a very impressive debut album
that should appeal to folk, blues, rock-a-billy and country crowds alike.
Raucous
roadhouse band makes 'Creepy' sound OK
SCOTT D. LEWIS
Somewhere, well beyond the tracks that signal
the wrong side of town, there is a ramshackle roadhouse bar. Some might
even call it a honky-tonk. The windows are all boarded up and it's in
dire need of paint. Inside, you can barely see the worn wooden floor
through the carpet of peanut shells and cigarette butts. The bartender
is the sheriff's cousin. For everyone's protection, beer is served only
in plastic cups. This is the kind of place that I Can Lick Any SOB in
the House would play every night, and the crowd of crusty cousins would
whoop it up right along with the band.
I Can Lick, as the economic and the in-the-know
call this Portland quintet, has been causing a stir around town for
its incendiary, tear-the-house-down live shows. With the release of
"Creepy Little Noises," the boys in the band can tear down your house,
as well.
Some bands have detectable influences, while
others try to hide their musical history. I Can Lick has clear influences
and relishes shoving them in your face. The Gun Club can be heard here,
Mojo Nixon on expired cough medicine can be heard there, a guitar section
gets stolen shamelessly from Led Zeppelin, and throughout the CD's 11
tracks can be heard a whole lot of "Let It Bleed"-era Rolling Stones.
Ringleader Mike D. introduces the set with an
insane a cappella hog-holler before the music proper kicks in, though
nothing's proper about the racket he makes with his partners in slime,
Jon Burbank (guitar, keyboards), Dewey Revelle (bass), David Lipkind
(harmonica) and one Flapjack Texas (drums).
These "Creepy Little Noises" run the range from
the chugging desert swagger of "Graveyard Song" through the downbeat
and boozy '70s pop vibe of "Swing Man Swing." While Mike D.'s raucous
rasp clearly is at the center of every song, several of Lipkind's wailing
harmonica solos step up to nearly steal the show, and the rest of the
band forms the ideal bridge between the two primal forces.
From the sound of things, I Can Lick Any SOB
in the House can do just that. But at least the pummeling is delightfully
demented, fueled as it is by furious fun.
The Portland country-rock band's debut CD
"Creepy Little Noises" is distinguished by some nifty arrangements
and sonic touches, but most of all by singer Mike D., who sounds like
a cross between Mick Jagger and an extremely nervous Ronnie Van Zandt..
MERCURY,
3/28/02
Is there such a genre in music as "redneck western"?
Icanlickanysonofabitchinthehouse's name says it all: A squawking and
undisciplined harmonica, the same forceful bass line of Rev. Horton
Heat, and determined lyrics about graveyards and rattlesnake bites.
More redneck than country-western, there is not much that is melodious
about Mike D's voice--raspy and scratchy. But then again, there is not
much that is melodious or glad-handing about kicking a sonofabitch's
ass. The band's louder songs grab the anger and chaos of a barroom brawl
by the short hairs, but what sets them apart are their softer songs,
shuffling ditties that sound like a lamenting good-for-nothing, slopping
his worries into the bottom of a glass. Hard-hitting barroom music:
just my style. PHIL DOT BUSSE
Willamette
Week, 3/27/02
"I've tasted blood," Mike D (Stumptown scene
stud, not Beastie Boy) snarls in the intro to his band's new debut
album, Creepy Little Noises, and by the time his cronies in I Can
Lick Any Sonofabitch in the House kick in moments later, you can practically
hear the plasma dripping from his jowls. With truly demonic harp licks
from David Lipkind squealing along to the take-no-prisoners backbeat,
and in-your-face lyrics like "It ain't gonna matter what Adolf Hitler
did or what John Lennon sung five billion years from now," D sounds
like he's on a suicide mission to prove that his group lives up to
the drunken boast of its moniker. Even when he switches from electric
to acoustic guitar, the intensity does not let up. (He's also credited
with playing bass on "The Hamm's Can Full of Rice.") It's a remarkably
clear and dynamic recording, which more than does justice to the surprising
subtlety D can muster. The vocals sometimes recall some of Axl Rose's
throatier moments, or peak-junkie-period Steve Earle, with vowels
twisted into an improbable twang: "Heaven," for instance, comes through
as "hyeahvohn." But beneath the bluster lie some songs of substance,
with humor and personality to burn. (JR).
S.F.
Examiner, 01/03
Portland-based alt-country rockers I Can Lick
Any SOB in the House bring their Tom Waits-tinged honky-tonk to The
City by the Bay.
The band's gritty Americana roots coat singer
Mike Damron's raspy voice like a not-so-soothing lozenge. Its debut
album, "Creepy Little Noises" (In Music We Trust), plays like drunken
trucker's blues, a collection of calloused tunes about shattered hopes
and simple pleasures for scruffy, hard working, pack-a-day loners who
enjoy the afternoon's first beer as much as the company of a good woman
and the reek of 18-wheeler funk.
|