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FUBAR
Rock's heart and soul
On a visit to Ireland's remote Dingle Peninsula years ago,
my wife and I got wind of a music session at a local pub. In a
back room, local musicians mostly farmers gathered
with townsfolk, friends, and relatives. It was a rousing good
time, with music as rich and polished as anything I've ever
heard. At one point they called to the stage a young woman in the
audience. She sang in a voice as clear and moving as a spring sky
after a heavy rainstorm.
Walking into the Del Rio on a Tuesday evening to hear FUBAR is
the closest thing to that experience I've had in Ann Arbor.
They don't play Irish music, but the sensation is similar, even
down to the unexpected thrills from a disarming female vocalist.
Seeing FUBAR is like sitting in on a jam session among discerning
pop-rock veterans. They play with energy and skill that would be
the envy of far-better-known bands and with an enthusiasm
that comes from playing the stuff they want to play. Apart from
some highly compelling original material, most of their numbers
are covers but not of the standards that oldies stations
have played to death.
Organized and fronted by Randy Tessier, the bassist of George
Bedard and the Kingpins, FUBAR ranges idiosyncratically across the
pop landscape of the last half century, from the Everly Brothers
to Etta James to the Kinks to Jackie Wilson to U2. When FUBAR
covers songs from well-known groups such as the Byrds, it's
likely to be something obscure like "You and Me" rather
than "Mr. Tambourine Man." This six-piece ensemble is
equally adept at reinvigorating catchy but little-heard R&B tunes,
such as Maxine Brown's infectious "Oh, No, Not My Baby."
And not too many bands would reach for the flipped-out psychedelic
frenzy of Count Five's "Psychotic Reaction" and make
it sound powerful and fresh. Most remarkably, FUBAR tackles the
1960s San Francisco cult group Love, spinning out energetic,
inventive covers of two of that enigmatic group's most complex
songs, "Alone Again Or," with its Latin-style saxophone
wails, and "A House Is Not a Motel."
You don't expect a bunch of seasoned musicians to be this
daring. But Tessier is a wild man like a caged animal
shaking his cell bars and he's put together a band of
musicians' musicians. Out front is the unprepossessing Sophia
Hanifi, formerly of Map of the World, who doesn't look or act
as if she has the kind of tart, tangy, soulful voice that can jolt
your heart. The contrast between her almost evanescent stage
presence and the power of her interpretations is disconcerting.
The combination of Hanifi's sassy vocals, Tessier's rebel-rock
attitude, and the rest of the band's talent and verve restores
the heart and soul and unrepentant energy that rock used to have
before it was hijacked by self-obsessed ironists.
FUBAR is at Leopold Bros. on Wednesday, June 12,
and at the Top of the Park on Sunday, June 30.
Michael Betzold
Photo by J. Adrian Wylie
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