Keep on truxin'

Sep 15, 1999 at 12:00 am

Sure rock died in ’59 or ’69 or ’77 or ’87 (go ahead and take your pick) but Royal Trux make rock sound like what rock should – or maybe even could – sound like in 1999. Jennifer Herrema (vocals) and Neil Hagerty (vocals, guitar), the partnership behind the Trux, have been there and back, seizing possibilities throughout their career. They truly capture that rock energy, whether it’s just the two of them wallowing in hazy abstraction, or when they use a full band and the record company’s bank account to top the big guys at their own game with their take on post-Exile guitar rock.

Veterans favors the latter mode, with "Waterpark" (their most AC/DClike tune yet!), piano ballads, downer post-Zep rock blues, even some flutey, fruity Tin Pan Alley psych ditties, and of course Herrema’s charismatic brat-growl. They’ve also hooked up with a guy who brings preprogrammed Casio rhythms to real life with his arsenal of Latin and Caribbean percussion. Suffice to say, Jimmy Buffett this ain’t.

It’s good and groovy, and arrives just in time to crank out through your car windows during these last days of summer.

Then, halfway through, they flip you over with "SickAzz Dog," one of their most abstract tunes since the mighty Twin Infinitives. The absolute highlight comes at the end of Veterans, with "Blue is the Frequency." Starting with two mellow verses and a chorus, the lion’s share of this nine-minute song finds Hagerty in guitar-god mode, creating some of the most inspiring rock solo fretwork in recent memory. Guest stars Dave Pajo (bass) and Jon Theodore (drums) lay down the heavy plod while Neil goes off into uncharted – and pretty much unprecedented – territory for the Trux.

If these guys were "scene-uniters," then "Blue" might be their "Marquee Moon." But they’re living in the Virginia countryside, and the kids are getting down to the Bizkit. Not sure where the Trux are headed, don’t know where they’re gonna drop you off, but if you’re a rocker, be glad that they’re driving. Here’s your rock record of the year.

On Thursday, Sept. 16, Royal Trux play at Detroit’s Gold Dollar (3129 Cass Ave., 313-833-6873). They’ll also make an in-store appearance at Royal Oak’s Neptune Records earlier in the day. Call Neptune for details at 248-586-0519.