Teenage Head

Teenage Head

You don’t need to listen to Teenage Head’s entire 1979 eponymous debut album to realize the band was much more than “Canada’s answer to The Ramones” (as it was panned by many a snarky critic back in the day). But you should still hear all 10 of these tunes, which brilliantly blend power pop, rockabilly, new wave, punk, and garage rock into a supercharged sound loaded to the gills with barbed hooks. “Top Down” opens, with hard-chugging guitar riffs colliding with hyper rhythms as singer Frankie Venom sneers his vocals. “Ain’t Got No Sense” offers up classic-sounding late-'70s punk with melodic, blaring guitar distortion and pogo-friendly singing that recalls faster moments from The Nerves’ 1976 self-titled EP. The Pop works in twangy surf guitar and gallons of wet, vintage vocal reverb in “Bonerack” before the fan favorite “Picture My Face” downshifts the drumming for a midtempo tune reflecting the Los Angeles power pop sound. The band injects Chuck Berry riffs and endearingly offbeat handclaps into the punk-pop standout “Curtain Jumper,” while “Little Boxes” delves into '50s-inspired rock ‘n’ roll.

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