'80s hair band makes a lackluster return
by Chas J. Hartman
THE POST
Enuff Znuff
10
Spitfire Records
ONE STAR
Some think hair/glam rock died when Nirvana came along.
Well, not exactly.
Recent years have witnessed the return of some '80s juggernauts, namely
Poison and Ratt. Now we have the long-awaited return of Enuff Znuff.
Enuff Znuff's latest album, titled 10, features 12 songs of
what the band's press release describes as "pop heaven." It also says
this record contains "real guitars, perfectly-pitched harmonies and unshakeable
melodies containing songs destined to become classics."
This album is far from pop perfection, but it is surprising to hear
such an eclectic collection of melodic material from a former hair band.
That is not to say that 10 succeeds in all its attempts at sounding different,
but it does display some courage on Enuff Znuff's part. The comebacks
by Poison and Ratt saw nothing more than a rerun of their "classics" mixed
with some heartless attempts at new hair rock tunes.
Believe it or not, the album's leadoff track "There Goes My Heart"
sounds like a cross between The Beatles and The Cars. Lead singer Donnie
Vie tries hard to mix the best of Paul McCartney's singing style with
the best of John Lennon's. Mix in some late '70s/early '80s FM radio guitar
riffs, and one would never know that Enuff Znuff used to be all hair.
Chris Shepard may be the person who deserves the most credit for
transforming Enuff Znuff into a tolerable band. Shepard has mixed everybody
from the Smashing Pumpkins to KMFDM. In fact, he mixed the new Wilco record
prior to doing 10.
On "Fly Away," Enuff Znuff sticks with the Sgt. Pepper's-era Beatles
sound, but unfortunately brings in some Motley Crue-tinged guitar riffs.
Even then, this song is shockingly bearable. It is as if even a small
regression to the '80s hair sound cannot prevent Enuff Znuff from sounding
delightfully poppy.
It is on "The Beast," however, where 10 starts to go horribly
wrong. The songs start sounding like poorly done Dokken outtakes, and
Vie attempts to get that David Coverdale crooning style down. Everything
culminates in disaster by track five, titled "Wake Up," which sees Enuff
Znuff failing at a love ballad.
Unfortunately, the disintegration of 10 does not stop there.
"Suicide" sounds like an uninspired attempt at Lenny Kravitz's "It's Not
Over 'Til It's Over." "Bang On" is their truest attempt on this album
at reclaiming that trademark '80s schlock sound. Unfortunately, it belongs
in the basement of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame with all those disastrous
Jackyl records.
The album's final track is a one-dimensional cover of Cheap Trick's
"Everything Works If You Let It." Billy Corgan added some guitar to this
track, then demanded that it be remixed to have his guitar part at a higher
volume. Corgan must be really hard up for work, and he picked the wrong
band to help.
At least Corgan knew when to call it quits with the Pumpkins. Enuff
Znuff is still living under an illusion of grandeur.
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