Articles and Reviews
COBRA VERDE
"Copycat Killers" (Scat Records)
Aversion.com
Most self-modeled rock'n'roll messiahs such as Cobra Verde spend most of their
careers trying to "save" things. The world, rock'n'roll, enough spare change to
pick up a Schlitz 40-ounce for before the show are but the most popular. This
time out, however, Cleveland's resident rock'n'roll junkies are all about
destroying everything they get their hands on, at least in the note-for-note
literalist sense.
Taking on a set full of cover songs, Cobra Verde smashes the blueprints of songs
by the good (New Order), the bad (Pink) and the ridiculously obscure (The Easter
Monkeys). Taking the shards of those songs, as well as a bunch of noise and
attitude from the band member's own, much cooler, record collections, Copycat
Killers solders its tracks back together for a scratch-and-dent take on pop
hits.
Cobra Verde packs a big, no, humongous bong load and fires it up for Pink's "Get
the Party Started" that crosses the onetime MTV favorite with Detroit-styled
funk rock and a legion of marijuana references ("I'm getting high, so you'd
better get the party started"). Thus, with heavily bloodshot eyes, Cobra Verde
tries its hand at clusterfucking the canon with a slew of mix'n'match styles and
songs. Continuing the funk vibe, Hawkwind returns as classic Motor City Motown
in "Urban Guerilla," then Donna Summers gets spaced out with a distinctly
Krautrock makeover of "I Feel Love." Blasting New Order's "Temptation" into
straightforward pop isn't quite as successful for the band, nor is The
Stones-go-lounge in "Play With Fire."
Cobra Verde's still a rock band, first and foremost, however, and, when it's not
getting its goof on smashing up the pop lexicon, performs much better kicking up
a racket and playing straightforward rock'n'roll. Shots on The Undertones'
"Teenage Kicks," The Flamin' Groovies' "Yesterday's Numbers" and Mot the
Hoople's "Rock and Roll Queen" show a more honest, if less creative, side of
Verde.
Revering the old masters can be such a drag. Sometimes, it's just more fun to
scribble moustaches and beards all over them as Cobra Verde does on Copycat
Killers. It's not going to win the band too many new fans, save a few too-clever
rock'n'roll fanatics with the record catalog deep and diverse enough to really
enjoy this kind of monkeyshines.
-- Matt Schild
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