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Everything
Works
Chicago's
hardest working band scores big with one of the best albums of the year.
Paraphernalia is significant for several reasons;
first it marks the band's debut on Spitfire Records, a move that could
put them back in the public eye (and hopefully ear) where they belong.
Second, and no doubt as a direct result of the first reason, it marks a
return to stores for Enuff Z'nuff in communities where they haven't
appeared since their final major studio release, Animals
With Human Intelligence, in 1993. Third, it
marks a return to the original logo for the band; this is the equivalent
of flipping the baseball cap around before the pitch, or putting those
special sneakers on before the big race: it means some serious action is
about to take place - and the listener is not disappointed.
Enlisting
help from some of the Windy City's most well known axemen, singer Donnie
Vie, bassist Chip Znuff, drummer Ricky Parent and guitarist Monaco create
an album full of power, grace and texture. The band's usual influences
are present, as ghosts of the Beatles and Cheap Trick fade in and out throughout
the 14 tracks, but this time they aren't as easy to spot. It seems that
Enuff Z'nuff have finally learned how to blend completely with their fore
bearers into a new, cohesive sound that simultaneously manages to caress
and assault the senses. That's not to say that all the tunes are complex;
the simple, instantly hummable songs that have become EZN's trademark are
here in the form of the Vie/Znuff penned compositions "Ain't It Funny",
an aggressive pop tune about the the rut we all find ourselves in eventually,
and "Invisible", a schizophrenic masterpiece that brings to mind
early Styx.
It's
hard to tell if the Styx sound is by accident or design; that band's guitarist
James "JY" Young plays on "Invisible"and other songs on the disc. Also
appearing are Smashing Pumpkins' founder Billy Corgan, and Cheap Trick's
Rick Nielsen (who, incidentally, does not contribute to the cover of his
own "Everything Works If You Let It"). Unfortunately, none of these capable
artists deliver anything significant to the album; Monaco could have done
all of the guitar parts himself and no one would have even noticed. I suspect
that the addition of three already established rock superstars was done
not so much to show the spirit and brotherhood of Chicagoans (all of them
come from that city) as it was meant to create exposure for Enuff Z'nuff.
This is understandable; these guys have been plugging away for ten years'
worth of critically acclaimed albums, with almost no commercial success.
If this move helps bring them into the public eye, then more power to them.
Paraphernalia
is an album that deserves to be heard.
-John N. Daily
Track Listing For Paraphernalia
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