The Violent Femmes' punk-pop underground sound gave combative nobodies a voice in the '80s and '90s, thanks to
Gordon Gano's playful twist on teen angst and panting sexual frustration. Two decades later,
Gano was still the indie-rock artisan when he made his solo debut with
Hitting the Ground.
Gano's selection of songs were exclusively written for some of his heroes, not to mention some of indie-rock's finest like
They Might Be Giants,
Frank Black, and
Mary Lou Lord.
Hitting the Ground is flat-out clever, cool, and cocky. Cymbals and two-tone percussion shimmy and shake on the album title track.
PJ Harvey is an uncanny match for
Gano, for her wicked vocal stomp and distorted guitar work on this surf-styled number is equally fiery to his own sarcastic rendition. His frenzied punk howl of "Make It Happen" sticks with the winning formula, too. Ex-
4 Non Blondes frontwoman
Linda Perry carries the lovelorn torch song "So It Goes" beautifully, while
John Cale remains unruffled on the piano-driven lounge cut "Don't Pretend."
Gano's songwriting on these particular songs hit to the core of what we're all afraid to notice: Life sucks sometimes. He's always been painfully honest, whether he's been funny or crass about it. The funky "Catch 'Em in the Act" is classic
Gano, with sexy, self-explanatory lyrics of male sexual adventure.
Lou Reed's blues-tinged jams and sleek vocals point a finger at the paternal side of things, but humorously so. More than anything, it seems that
Gordon Gano just wants to have fun. He's obviously had a blast with the Violent Femmes, but takes things in a personal direction on
Hitting the Ground. What took him so long? That doesn't matter.
Hitting the Ground is up to expectation and longtime
Femmes fans shouldn't be surprised. ~ MacKenzie Wilson