I’m feeling a little worn out on
this fine summer Thursday, and I’m ready for the weekend to begin. Before we
get there, let’s get to another music review.
Disc 897 is….Mr. Eliminator
Artist: Dick Dale
and his Del-Tones
Year of Release: 1964
What’s up with the Cover? This picture looks like Dick
Dale is sitting behind one of those cardboard cutouts where you can pretend to
be sitting in a race car. This would be a feature for kids at Daytona or
something. Dick probably paid 25 cents to have his picture taken here, and I
bet there was a line of kids waiting in line with their moms waiting for him to
be finished so they could have a turn.
How I Came To Know It: I really loved Dick Dale’s other “ho-dad”
album “Checkered Flag” and went back looking for more of the same. “Mr.
Eliminator” was it.
How It Stacks Up: I have four Dick Dale albums (plus one
compilation album that doesn’t stack up). In every race there is a car that
must come in last, and “Mr. Eliminator” is that car. Because this is the last Dick
Dale album in my collection, here’s a recap:
- Checkered
Flag: 5 stars (reviewed
at Disc 688)
- Summer
Surf: 4 stars
(reviewed at Disc 394)
- Surfer’s
Choice: 4 stars (reviewed at
Disc 756)
- Mr.
Eliminator: 3 stars (reviewed
right here)
- Surf
Beat: best of (not rated but reviewed
at Disc 757)
Ratings: 3 stars
In 1963
Dick Dale struck hot rod lightning with “Checkered Flag,” one of my favourite
albums of all time. “Mr. Eliminator” is proof that lightning never strikes in
the same place twice. It is a good record, but it doesn’t have the same magic
as the record released just one year prior.
All the
elements are there. Dick Dale’s signature surf guitar sound wails across the
tracks. In fact, some of the best tracks on this record are the instrumentals,
which are all about Dale and his axe making magic. The album begins with the title track, which
features not only a groovy guitar riff, but some pretty sweet drumming action
as well. Like most of Dale’s songs, it is over in just over two minutes,
leaving you wanting more.
Fortunately,
there is more, as the record features a fistful of instrumentals, including the
furiously fast “Flashing Eyes” and
the Mexicana-flavoured “Taco Wagon”
before it hits the album’s instrumental height with “The Victor.”
“The Victor” has an arrogant disconnect
in the guitar and a deep well filled with confidence and aggression that simply
says “I drive fast.” I was fortunate enough to be on the bus when I heard it,
with my foot far away from any inconvenient gas pedal.
On many other
Dick Dale albums, the songs with lyrics paint a great picture of whatever beach
crowd he is idolizing. On his surfer records, the songs are full of tanned lads
sneaking off to secret surfer spots to hang ten and mocking the gremmies and
the ho-dads (the slang term for the cool kids at the beach who were more into
cars than surfing). On his other hot rod record, “Checkered Flag” he flips the
script, and sells up these same ho-dads, racing up and down the strip looking
for fast cars and adventurous women.
There
are definitely moments of this latter tradition on “Mr. Eliminator.” The best
example is “Blond in the 406” a classic
track about a fast girl in a car faster than even Dick Dale’s hot-rod persona
can muster. The resulting pursuit is a lot of fun, and Dale’s admiration for a
girl who can out-duel the boys down on the strip is a welcome bit of gender
equality for 1964.
“My X-KE” is a fun song about a Jaguar
that warns:
“Look out Stingrays and Cobras
too
I’m gonna show you what this car
can do.
My X-KE, My X-KE
She cost me a fortune yessiree
Dual exhaust and four on the
floor
Man this car is sure a go…er!”
I’m more
into American muscle these days, but the mid-sixties Jaguar X-KE is a pretty
sweet ride, and well deserving of any car enthusiast’s love.
Unfortunately,
despite a lot of good stuff on “Mr. Eliminator” there is just a bit too many hokey
tracks to pull me all the way in. “50
Miles To Go” might as well be “50
Bottles of Beer on the Wall” for all its musical interest, and “The Squirrel” is the kind of kitsch that
would be fun if I were eight years old, but doesn’t have enough to catch my attention
of a grown-up.
The
record is still solid, and for musicianship alone I’m tempted to give it 4
stars, but it suffers from standing in the tall shadow of “Checkered Flag.” The
instrumentals made me long for better ones on other albums, and apart from the
two exceptions noted above, the songs with lyrics were lacking the standard of
excellence I’ve come to expect from a master like Dick Dale. I guess he spoiled
me with his own greatness.
1 comment:
You should try some of his later albums like Tribal Thunder or Unknown Territory. So good. His voice has taken on quite a growl that really works with the tracks he's making.
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