The Dictators, Viva Dictators

The Dictators

Viva Dictators

Escapi Music

Thrown together in 1974 as a kind of tribute to The MC-5,
The Stooges, The Flamin’ Groovies, and The New York Dolls, The Dictators was a
great barroom rock ‘n’ roll band that soon gained notoriety of its own. But
rock was beginning to grow lethargic and for any number of reasons the band
wallowed in relative obscurity before its breakup.

The band never really went away,
though. Various lineups aside, it’s always been around. There has always been a
place for The Dictators — now more than ever.

Viva Dictators is
a recently recorded live album that flies in the pimply face of contemporary
rock (or punk rock, as some still call it). With its ragged wisdom and a
we-live-in-NYC-and-we’re-gonna-die-herestance,
the band blasts through 17 cuts culled from shows at The Bowery Ballroom and
Maxwell’s. Tracks like “New York, New York,” “Pussy And Money,” and “Who Will
Save Rock & Roll,” are full of the raw power that has always characterized
the band live. Handsome Dick Manitoba’s boastful throaty roar and Ross The
Boss’ wailing guitar and barroom bar-chord crunch make this a great record for
punks and rockers who were there, and for those who still are.

— Frank De Blase

Common

Be

Geffen Records

Common’s latest effort, Be,
has the Top Hip-Hop Record of 2005 spot locked. With ill beats and raw rhymes
throughout, Com’s got you covered with the storytelling tune (“Testify”), the
hard-hitting street themes (“The Corner”), the questions about God to make you
think (“Faithful”), and the song about love (my favorite track, “Love is…”).
Not to mention him straight rhyming his ass off on the semi-autobiographical
“It’s Your World.” The man isn’t claiming perfection, though. He makes it known
(many times) that the sleeper LP Electric
Circus
was too spacey for most, but he’s “back.”

Other than some lyrical masturbation by his Chi-Town
“brother from another mother” Kanye West and the Honey Comb sample that HAS to
grow on you on “Testify,” it’s a solid, short, and sweet 11 tracks of pure
fire. Also features John Legend, John Mayer, Bilal, and J Dilla on the beats.

— Jaythreeoh