The Reverend Horton Heat - Lucky 7 (CD)

Album Details: Lucky 7

Release Date:03/04/2002
Label:Artemis Records
UPC:699675112226

User Reviews: Lucky 7

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    Back to what makes these guys great

    By Bob Steelballs  Sep 9, 2003

    More of why Jim Heath is among the greatest guitar players ever to grace the planet. The album rocks hard when it has to and mellows out just enough. The talent of all three members of the band shines throughout the album. This is a bit more of a psy...chobilly album than 'Spend A Night In The Box' was, and sounds just as good and original as some of the band's earlier work. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Sweet

    By WWW.OUF-POOL.COM  Dec 19, 2002 | 0 out of 1 found this Lucky 7 review helpful

    Reverend Does it Again. Little more 50's Sound but thats fine.

Pro Reviews: Lucky 7

  • All Music Guide

    Goosed by the news that this album's "Like a Rocket" (with slightly altered lyrics) was chosen as 2002's official Daytona 500 theme song, Reverend Horton Heat and his trusty duo of wildman bassist Jimbo and loose limbed drummer Scott Churilla rev up their collective engines again. The group's seventh album (on their fourth label) is bolstered by meaty yet stripped-down production from veteran Ed Stasium (Ramones, Living Colour, Smithereens) who returns after working on Heat's 1998 disc Space Heater and 1999's Holy Roller. Not surprisingly then, little has changed in the Rev's trademarked approach. Mixing Molotov-cocktail-quality portions of rockabilly, country, and Ramones-styled punk, Heat charges through his usual PC-free topics of bad wimmin' ("What's Reminding Me of You," "Ain't Gonna' Happen"), good cars ("Galaxy 500"), and nefarious band members ("You've Got a Friend in Jimbo") with sharp, muscular, often breathless playing in a heavyweight attack that will please established fan...s, but probably won't grab any new ones. Adding the fleet-fingered bluegrass of the instrumental "Show Pony" to his established bag of tricks, along with the reverb-laden spaghetti western Dick Dale-isms of another instrumental and the intricately suite-styled "Duel at the Two O'Clock Bell," shows how adaptable and talented Heat is as a guitarist. But the spoken word "Sermon on the Jimbo" puts religion back in the Rev's schtick as he provides a fire and brimstone sermon about his bandmate in a tacky bit that goes nowhere. The soliloquy probably makes for a show-stopping moment live, but is a distraction -- and not a particularly well conceived one -- on album, as it sets up the closing hillbilly romp "You've Got a Friend in Jimbo." Although it peters out in its last 10 minutes, Lucky 7 is a workmanlike and thrilling if unadventurous addition to Heat's fiery catalog, and provides him with more fuel for his explosive gigs. - Hal Horowitz, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Reverend Horton Heat

With his highly stylized, backwoods hick-preacher image, it would be easy to dismiss the Reverend Horton Heat as a poseur. But it would be wrong. Instead of treating rockabilly as a campy joke like the Cramps, the good Reverend rocks the hell out of his modern-day rockabilly, playing it as if it were the hardest of punk, yet without any of the self-conscious trappings o... Read more