Drunk Jerks. Is there anything appealing about them?

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I know you've seen guys who walk around the local bar scene making obscene comments and gestures. They have a very loud voice. They usually are really big guys that 'don't give a fuck'. So, I'm asking the ladies mostly, is there anything appealing about them? They can hold a conversation I suppose -- and they definitely have lots of confidence. They usually are in big groups. Lots of girls are usually around them.

CaptainLorax, Sunday, 9 September 2007 07:12 (eighteen years ago)

Oops, wrong section. And I didn't drink tonight.

CaptainLorax, Sunday, 9 September 2007 07:20 (eighteen years ago)

The Drunk Jerks - Inside In/Inside Out

The last year and a half has witnessed a huge resurgence in British guitar bands, who are writing memorable pop songs that are accessible to all. The lines between indie and the mainstream are continually blurring as a result, with groups like the Arctic Monkeys and Kaiser Chiefs threatening the charts in a manner that would have been unimaginable just five or so years ago.

And it's in this vein that Brighton's Drunk Jerks belong - already making sizeable impressions in the top 40 with their three singles to date, the quartet are impossibly young (their average age is a whopping 20), hugely enthusiastic and crucially, have a knack of putting together mind bogglingly catchy two and a half to three minute compositions that recall a bygone era where this is all that mattered.

Think of seminal pop bands like The Beach Boys, The Beatles and The Kinks at their most melodic and simple, throw in some lashings of Police style reggae and you're at least half way to understanding Inside In/Inside Out, their debut record.

But of course what's on offer isn't complex or challenging in any way shape or form, these are 14 little ditties written in their short time together as a band that exude a great sense of youth, energy and charisma, all in wonderfully concise and easy to digest pieces of music.

Needless to say it isn't perfect - there's a track that sounds like it was knocked out during a drunken jam (Jackie Big Tits), and a couple that are pretty inconsequential (Seaside, Got No Love). Lyrically, they're about as single issue as Veritas, with the topic of girls and relationships receiving blanket coverage. But it would be churlish to criticise - they're barely out of their teens, this is a hastily put together debut, and they can only get better. And the remaining 11 songs are really quite good indeed.

See The World is an early highlight, a 100-mile an hour rush of trenchant, distorted guitars and impassioned singing from frontman Luke Pritchard, a trait that characterises many of the songs on this collection.

Sofa Song is a great pop single that loses none of its vitality on the album, as is Eddie's Gun, the one famous for its subject matter of, er...erectile dysfunction. Here it survives a re-working from its original, highly polished single version into something altogether rawer and grittier. Its refrain of "In the barrel of my gun, I hope I'm not the only one" remains as contagious as the first time we heard it last July.

Ooh La is a sun fried, upbeat acoustic number, with, you guessed it - a wonderful chorus, or series of choruses as it happens, whilst Matchbox is quite possibly the most joyous and bouncy track you'll hear all year. The highlights don't stop there - I Want You Back shows off a more melancholic and emotive side to the band, and If Only jerks around like an aggressive drunk in a straightjacket.

Then there's Time Awaits, where Pritchard does an impression of a street busking soul singer in the deep south of America (or anything on BRMC's latest album), before he and his cohorts kick in to something of an extended, almost psychedelic rock-out. It really shouldn't be good, but it most certainly is.

And that's pretty much the story of the record. Four young, terribly well spoken chaps pull off - surprisingly, but with some panache it must be said - an eclectic album showcasing influences that their parents probably aren't old enough to remember. A blindingly bright future beckons.

Heave Ho, Sunday, 9 September 2007 07:25 (eighteen years ago)

My friend in NYC who is a severe drunk keeps miraculously finding girlfriends. I don't understand it either.

Bimble, Sunday, 9 September 2007 07:38 (eighteen years ago)

They might buy me a drink.

I had to deal with a gigantic arsehole last night who seemed to be under the impression that working in the city made him something special. I kicked his arse at pool and that was pretty much the last we saw of him.

Colonel Poo, Sunday, 9 September 2007 08:17 (eighteen years ago)

Hahah. That reminds me of this guy I found myself next to at a bar in Canada (B.C.) and this guy was just so full of himself and telling all sorts of lies and man, I just left without saying goodbye.

Bimble, Sunday, 9 September 2007 08:26 (eighteen years ago)

Said I had to make a trip to the men's room, see and then noticed a doorway nearby when I was done.

Bimble, Sunday, 9 September 2007 08:27 (eighteen years ago)

I figure if you're going to loudly proclaim how ace you are at pool, you should probably actually be good at the game. Either that or a fat public school dickhead. Whichever works for you I guess.

Colonel Poo, Sunday, 9 September 2007 08:30 (eighteen years ago)

Bhahahahah

Bimble, Sunday, 9 September 2007 08:31 (eighteen years ago)

I have a certain helpless voluble charm.

Noodle Vague, Sunday, 9 September 2007 11:38 (eighteen years ago)

I've got early Roxy Music in my tummy but old Ultravox (HA! HA! HA!) in my ears.

And before you judge me I'm going to get together a ska band real soon. Just kidding.

Rock on, Noodle. Only New Wave can save us now. I mean...sortof.

Bimble, Sunday, 9 September 2007 11:50 (eighteen years ago)

I don't want New Wave, I want the Soft Pink Truth.

Noodle Vague, Sunday, 9 September 2007 12:02 (eighteen years ago)

Well I don't know that one, I'll have to check it out. In the meantime, Foxx era Ultravox is warping my brain entirely. But never mind me because I have Children of God on CD for the first time.

Bimble, Sunday, 9 September 2007 12:09 (eighteen years ago)

Excellent. I'm waaaaay too fragile for Swans this morning.

Noodle Vague, Sunday, 9 September 2007 12:17 (eighteen years ago)

drunk jerks vs. dead finks

gershy, Sunday, 9 September 2007 15:53 (eighteen years ago)

Hehehe! Noodle! I was just thinking of you when I woke up this morning! But I couldn't remember what was said last night. I haven't been able too listen to the Children of God CD yet. It's just too intense for my mood, I think. But I'll likely get to it midweek.

I'll have to check out this band called Drunk Jerks.

Bimble, Sunday, 9 September 2007 18:42 (eighteen years ago)

oh goddamn you people there actually isn't a band from Brighton called Drunk Jerks is there? You've led me astray in the name of humour. I'm not impressed. I have a good friend from Brighton. Please stop this torture and provide a link. Thanks.

Bimble, Sunday, 9 September 2007 18:57 (eighteen years ago)

There's an album called The Music by The Music. Any common name is probably a band name.

CaptainLorax, Sunday, 9 September 2007 20:26 (eighteen years ago)

or The Band - The Band.
oh and get back on topic! (cuz I certaintly posted this in the right topic)

CaptainLorax, Sunday, 9 September 2007 20:28 (eighteen years ago)


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