Har du sansen for obskur soul og R&B perler fra 50-60 tallet som burde blitt hits?
Her har du bandet som leverer varene med glødende fuzz og twang drevet frem av Rachel Nagys sexy, raspende whiskey-stemme.
Jeg klyper meg i armen for å ikke tenke på Ronnie Spector fra Ronettes, Etta James, en kvinnelig Elvis eller jentene i Shangri-Las, men dette er giftig garagerock fra Detroit i 2001, og bandet heter selvfølgelig The Detroit Cobras. De åpner sterkt med "Hey Sailor" som lukter sterkt av The Actions "Hey Sha-Lo-Ney", en fengende låt med V8 driv og tøff koring. Denne gjengen er like bra enten det er Mary Wells, Jackie Deshanon eller Otis Redding låter som får en omgang.
I "Boss lady" innleder Rachel med tekstraden "I'm the boss of the hot sauce" her blir vi ristet frem på en bølge av tits and ass og du føler deg vekselvis hensatt til både jungel og illegal nattklubb på vei mot "the promised land". Hun snerrer og maler som en stor farlig katt enten det er riff basert rock & roll eller en ballade som passer til den siste dansen. "Let's forget about the past" er en Clyde McPhatter låt med et følsomt barpiano i bakgrunnen der hovedpersonen håper på en ny sjanse før han går til bunns i en brønn av sprit og anger. The Detroit Cobras lager festmusikk enten du liker Motown, Punk eller The White Stripes som spiller inn på samme selskap. Lån eller reserver Life Love and Leaving.
Detroit Cobras
The Detroit Cobras are an American garage rock band from Detroit, Michigan, which was formed in 1994 by guitarist Steve Shaw, guitarist Mary Ramirez, bassist Jeff Meier, drummer Vic Hill, and singer Rachel Nagy. The group was later known (with the exception of Rachel Nagy, and Mary Ramirez) for a constantly changing assortment of musicians. Rachel Nagy died on January 14, 2022.
The Detroit Cobras signed with Sympathy for the Record Industry and released their first album, Mink, Rat or Rabbit, in 1998. After a three-year gap, they released a second album, Life, Love and Leaving. The two albums consisted entirely of cover versions of songs from the 1950s, 1960s, with the exception of the Detroit Cobras version of “Bad Man” (done by the Cobras as “Bad Girl”) written by Greg Cartwright in the mid 1990s. In 2001, they were one of thirteen Michigan-based bands featured on Jack White's Sympathetic Sounds of Detroit compilation album: the Detroit Cobras' contribution was a cover of Otis Redding's "Shout Bamalama."
Their retro-garage rock formula proved popular in the UK and prompted the London-based Rough Trade Records to sign the band. They released an EP, Seven Easy Pieces, in 2003 and their third album, Baby, in 2004. Baby broke with the Cobras' tradition in that it included one original song, "Hot Dog (Watch Me Eat)". Baby was picked up for release in the US by Bloodshot (who added the songs from the Seven Easy Pieces EP to the end of Baby. In April 2007, Bloodshot released the band's fourth album, Tied & True.
The band was known for multiple line-up changes, although the band consistently fielded the classic rock and roll instrumental configuration of rhythm guitar (always played by Ramirez), lead guitar, bass and drums. Nagy and Ramirez generally had a touring line-up different from their recording line-up. Greg Cartwright of Reigning Sound (aka Greg Oblivian of The Oblivians) proved to be an especially prolific collaborator. Perhaps their most famous sideman was Don Was, who was their bassist for one gig in 2008.
In the summer of 2008, The Detroit Cobras went on tour in support of X on their 13x31 tour. For the summer of 2009, The Detroit Cobras headlined a tour with the Dex Romweber Duo in support. The band apparently stopped touring for several years after that, although they always played a few gigs every year, usually near Detroit but sometimes farther afield. In May and June 2014, they went on an extended tour of the Midwest and the West Coast. In April 2018, they traveled to Europe (for the first time since 2004) to play two festivals in Germany and Spain, which led to an extended European tour in October and November 2019. A US tour was planned for 2020 but canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Another tour was planned for 2022.
Nagy died on January 14, 2022, in New Orleans. News reports gave widely varying ages immediately following her death, ranging from her late 30s to her late 50s, but she was in fact 48 years old (born December 15, 1973).