Winnebago Deal have always point-blank refused to fit in. The duo have always spurned any notion of being part of any UK scene and instead have snuggled up to the DC hardcore and Seattle grunge scenes much more readily.
You’ll be pleased to know that they’re back with Flight Of The Raven and they’re as angry as ever, except they’ve refined their sound and written real songs. Their latest development has come after touring with Brant Bjork and then having the dubious honour of being Nick Oliveri’s backing band, Mondo Generator, for the past year.
Coming across like a wonderful reconstitution of The Bronx and Kyuss into one almighty rock behemoth, the duo are now so covered in sand, they’re almost part of the Desert scene.
Despite this, album opener ‘With Friends Like These’ has the classic Winnebago Deal sound about it – balls to the floor, all out speedrock. You get that stoner feeling soon after though. ‘Reeper’ is a two-minute homage to Germany’s premiere red light district found in Hamburg. Ben Perrier’s guitar work is more precise than ever before and he backs this up with a welcome QotSA-esque intrusion from a piano while he howls his bitter tales of woe over the top.
More tales of sad affliction are found in the frustration-fuelled ‘Fresco’ and the more languid ‘Czechoslovakia’. There is a frightening sense of anger and resentment coursing through the latter song that not even Nick Oliveri can build upon with his cameo screams.
In a radical departure from their perma-angry state into a more reflective, almost contemplative mood, ‘Going Home’ is a seven-minute stoner extravaganza. Inspired by a funeral procession in Wales after being on the road for an excessively long period, the near-apocalyptic lyrical content is complemented by a full and massive sound consisting of rolling riffs, theremins and, even more incredibly, a bass guitar, all peppered by the regular yearning howls. While it does threaten to border on the self-indulgent at times, a blind eye can always be turned in such marvellous exceptions as these.
Producer Jack Endino joins the band on the pounding title track with delicious slide guitar that lends a further element of the QotSA sound to proceedings. However, the beauty lies in the way that they follow this with more head-down, as-heavy-as-it-is-fast garage rock. It’s the perfect combination.
It’s because you know there’s another song just around the corner that will be just what Winnebago Deal have always done but they’ll be doing it better than before with a real progression and development of sound. Sure, ‘Targets’ is another no-brainer rock-out about shooting stuff that they could have been playing three years ago for all you know but there’s those ivories tinkling away again, hard and fast, adding a new and appreciated dimension to their music.
And then they finish the album with an exceptional rendition of Black Flag’s ‘Revenge’ with Nick Oliveri shrieking the lead vocals. Flight Of The Raven is the album that they will look back on and be the proudest of when their career is done.
Hopefully their future progress will not be hindered following the end of their Mondo Generator days after their fractious relationship with Oliveri came to an unsavoury head in June. It would be a shame because while they have surely created their ten out of motherf*cking ten, magnum opus at the third attempt, even more is expected from Winnebago Deal in the future.
this sounds ...
like it quite be quite good. their early stuff is the bomb too - theres nothing wrong with songs about shooting either ...
Hooray for forays into new musical territory
I'm all in favour of rocking out but it'll be nice to geta change of pace and instrumental combinations for once.
P.S. What happened with Nick? All seemed fine at Download...
Am I on dope...?
Or is it you guys? This stuff is garbage! A talentless garage band with mudhoney's fuzzbox using side two of In Utero as a blueprint. Seriously, this is so laughably "grunge" that it could have been made by those dirtball flannel kids in the first Collective Soul videos. A 10/10? God help us all.
^you sir
are wrong. The album is ace, well done Raz, top review.
I wasn't terribly impressed
by their myspace tracks. So nope, you're not on dope.
THIS IS AWESOME
end.
Hurrah!
Excellent album!
10?
TEN??
hehe
forgive my pedantry.. but...
"Winebago Deal have always point blank refused to fit in"
"they're almost part of the desert scene"
"[Winebago deal] have snuggled up to the DC harcore and Seattle Grunge scenes"
otherwise I fairly decent review which I was never going to agree with, on account of finding them an unbearable racket.
ummmm
the music is simple, the vocals are absolutly ordinary (for this type of music)
and for it to get a ten!!!!!!!!!!!!
Urgh
Winnebago Deal are pants
It;'s
Just fu manchu without the balls or good riffs, Balls, balls, balls and very boring live!!!!!!!!
eh
You winnebago deal haters have all listened to the album before it's officially released. While I still havent got my copy. Shame!