Jason & The Scorchers New Album

July 4, 2010 by Andrew Watt  
Filed under Around The World

80’s country-punk legends Jason and the Scorchers have released a new album, their first in 14 years earlier this year in America and are currently on tour  around Europe. They were always are brilliant live band and by all reports nothing has changed.

Hopefully there will be a promoter with a long enough memory wiling to bring the band back to Australia, but in the meantime you can get a hold of Halcyon Times any way you know how.

Jason Ringenberg talked about the album on the bands website and mentioned the impact his other career as a  children’s singer in his alter-ego of “Farmer Jason” impacted on his singing.

“So we now release Halcyon Times, the first Jason and the Scorchers record of new material since 1996. Yikes, that was 14 years ago! How did that happen??!! Almost everyone who hears the cd is calling it one of our finest efforts to date. I do agree, and I am not the kind of artist who says every record I am involved with is “our best one yet.” (I always wonder how artist who say that with every release can claim any credibility…)

No one is more surprised than me that this release even happened, let alone that it is a career record. I was quite reticent about the whole idea, but Warner kept after me. Certainly bringing Al Collins and Pontus Snibb on as the new rhythm section was a huge step in the right direction. That is truly a rhythm section for the ages. They nail it. Warner of course is playing at the top of his game, and I feel like I have learned a lot as a singer since the last JATS record. Honestly, being Farmer Jason the past 6 years has focused my singing considerably. I have learned to concentrate and enunciate more clearly, and to completely go into character.”

But don’t take Jason word for it. The following is typical of the reviews the album has been getting:

“How does ‘first album of all-new material since 1996′ sound to you? Enough to strike fear that some old band has been forced by penury into the studio again, and that some retread will be the order of the day? Well, in the case of Jason and the Scorchers, put that thought far from your mind. Back in the day, J&TS and their version of cowpunk (think of the way that The Pogues turned Irish folk music into something hornier and dirtier, then think of that done to awesome country music) turned out something approaching genius, especially on Fervor their EMI debut in 1983. It is one of the all-time great records, and it has been argued (pretty successfully) that this was the album that generated alt-country, not Son Volt. Halcyon Times may not quite approach the spark that ignited Fervor, but it does have the kind of quality that sustained its follow-up albums Lost and Found and Still Standing. The cheekiness is still there, the hard rock, the melodic approach and the absolute absence of any subtlety. Funky as all get-out, there are all sorts of reasons to be grateful for this all-new material.”