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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars It's about time!, May 30, 2009
This review is from: Frontier Days (Audio CD)
Finally, the first two Del-Lords albums are released on cd with great bonus tracks as well. This may be my favorite album from the 80's. Hard rockin with great lyrics. It's a shame this band wasn't playing in the arenas in the 80's instead of friggin REO, Styx, and Journey. Check this cd out. You'll be glad you did.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great reissues for a band that deserves its due, May 29, 2009
By 
Anon (NY NY USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Frontier Days (Audio CD)
If you never saw this band, back in the day, you don't know what you missed. Can't say I saw them all, but I saw plenty, and there was not a better live band around. Imagine Bruce doing an entire set of Clash songs, or maybe the Clash doing a whole set of Johnny Cash, and that will give you some idea of what they were like. I mean, these boys could PLAY.

The reissues sound great, and I am glad to see that some of my favorite cuts that didn't make the first LP are included here.

If'n you like your rock from this side of the Atlantic, and you appreciate the pure perfection of guitars, bass, drums, voice, and sweat, get all of these, you won't be disappointed.

I am gonna give this one my top rating. Trust me, my taste is impeccable. ;-)
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb, June 3, 2009
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This review is from: Frontier Days (Audio CD)
This is a true classic album, the vinyl copy of which was pretty much worn out on my turntable. Been waiting for it to be released on CD for a long time! Great songs - gritty lyrics, strong melodies, excellent lead and backing vocals. And, unlike the Johnny album, very good production. The Del Lords greatest hits CD had skipped over several of the best songs on this CD, including Mercenary and Feel Like Going Home.

The bonus tracks don't really add much, those on the Johnny CD add more value. Good liner notes. Great live band - hopefully they'll do a tour in support of the CD releases.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Glory glory glory!!!, August 2, 2009
By 
C. Hesting (Ft. Wayne, IN) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Frontier Days (Audio CD)
Today there is happiness in my household, because the Del-Lords are finally out on c.d.! For the last few years I have groused to anyone who will listen that when my deteriorating cassette of Frontier Days snapped, the last bond to a great rock and roll band would be broken forever. Thank God, no more whining...now everyone can hear this gem. This baby smokes, start to finish. Bruce Springsteen crosses C.C.R.s path at Green Day speed. Bruce fans would do well to hear How Can a Poor Man Stand Such Times played with real verve and style. Burning in the Flame of Love and Pledge of Love are dressed up with fine D-L harmonies. Get Tough fulfills the promise of its title, and the subject matter of Double Life is surprisingly moving. The closing song, Feel Like Going Home, is the crown of this record. Road songs are a rock and roll cliche, but the band manages to catch a particular touring moment with telling detail. One of the best parts about listening to Frontier Days? Knowing there is another D-L c.d., Johnny Comes Marching Home, that is just as good.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Americana Classic, July 12, 2009
This review is from: Frontier Days (Audio CD)
I was 19 and i loved rock n roll and punk rock. I used to go see Joan Jett and loved Eric Ambel who was a Blackheart at the time. Scott was a Dictator so I knew he was a rock god. When i first saw this record on the wall of my favorite Long Island record store i had not heard a song on it but bought it because of Scott and Eric.

"Frontier Days" is a classic album. Scott, you did better than Bruce on "How Can A Poor Man Stand Such Times And Live," and the version of that classic on this album is still my favorite of them all. "Livin' On Love" is Eric Ambel's vocal breakout and i still love to hear this song as much as i did twenty-five years ago. Frank Funaro's "I Play The Drums" is one of those cool bug your neighbors songs to blast, but at the end of the day it is the beauty and grace of Scott Kempner's songs that take hold on the ear. Listen to "Feel Like Going Home" and Scott Kempner's heart and soul come pouring through. The Del-Lords will always be one of my all time favorite bands and i treasure this album and my memories of their live concerts i was lucky enough to see. If you like pure American rock n roll you must own this album! The only bummer is the cheap packaging this label does on their covers. At least Scott Kempner wrote the liner notes though.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars 1984 debut from Scott Kempner's post-Dictators rock band, July 11, 2009
This review is from: Frontier Days (Audio CD)
After propelling The Dictators with his guitar for three albums, Scott "Top Ten" Kempner struck out on his own, forming the Del-Lords with ex-Blackhearts guitarist Eric Ambel, future Cracker drummer Frank Funaro, and bassist Manny Caitati for this 1984 debut. Kempner's sole co-write for the Dictators ("What It Is" from Bloodbrothers) gave only a hint of what he'd offer as the Del-Lords' primary songwriter. Intact from his days with the Dictators was the straightforward punch of electric guitar rock, but where the Dictators played fast and loud staccato rhythms that presaged punk rock, the Del-Lords struck a more classic rock `n' roll vibe, with rockabilly and mid-60s guitar rock replacing the Dictators' primal approach.

The Dictators performed songs of pop culture and adolescent joys (TV, wrestling, girls, science fiction), but the just-turned-30 Kempner had more serious things to get off his chest. The Dictators lack of commercial success left Kempner well placed to write about the struggles of the underclass. Three years into the Reagan administration, Kempner had become a musical activist, and though the Del-Lords didn't muster the confrontational spittle of the era's hardcore bands, neither did they shy away from the disastrous effects of the dry spout of trickle down economics. Kempner's songs include office workers augmenting meager incomes with illicit nighttime jobs, mercenaries prowling Central American, and tough times stretching from Brooklyn to Beirut. The album's opener is a revitalized take on the depression era "How Can a Poor Man Stand Such Times and Live," ramped up to a rocker and fleshed out with original verses.

But Kempner wasn't completely bound to social commentary, as the joyous "I Play the Drums" anticipates Ben Vaughn's equally contented "Rhythm Guitar" by several years. There are also straightforward rock `n' roll songs of love and broken hearts, including the blue highway of "Feel Like Going Home." Kempner describes in this reissue's new liner notes how the Del-Lords peered with the Blasters, Jason & The Scorchers and Los Lobos, yet each grew from a unique root. The Del-Lords stuck most closely to the basic four-piece rock `n' roll vibe, forsaking country, norteno or retro flavors. You could add the Flamin' Groovies (whose "Shake Some Action" descending guitar riff is given a nod on "Double Life") to the list of peers, but the Del-Lords didn't carry as strong a British Invasion vibe.

Producer Lou Whitney (Morells, Skeletons) keeps to the band's "two guitars, bass and drums, just the way God intended," though engineer Jon Smith didn't get the sonic weight Neil Geraldo and Gordon Fordyce captured on the band's third album, Based on a True Story. Kempner and Ambel prove a dynamic guitar duo, and the rhythm section seems to live in the pocket. This is all the more bracing when you consider that basic rock `n' roll wasn't burning up the charts in 1984. American Beat's CD reissue adds five bonus tracks, including four additional tunes highlighted by the passionate "Love on Fire," and an edgier alternate take of "Shame on You." This is a rockin' album from a year not generally noted for its basic rock `n' roll. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the Great 80's Bands Playing Timeless Rock, June 15, 2009
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This review is from: Frontier Days (Audio CD)
There was a lot of great rock & roll in the 1980s, unfortunately most of it did not make the radio play lists. The Blasters, Los Lobos, and The Rainmakers come immediately to mind. On a par with those bands was The Del-Lords a hard-driving band from New York. Finally after 25 years, we get their first two albums, "Frontier Days" and "Johnny Comes Marching Home," on CD. My memory was not wrong. These albums sound as good today as they did in the 80s. And the "Frontier Days" CD adds two songs, "Wastin' Time Talkin'" and "Love Among the Ruins," that are even better than some of the cuts on the original album. There was an excellent collection of Del-Lords material a few years ago on a now out-of-print CD titled, "Get Tough." Inexplicably, that CD left off "Shame on You," one of the best cuts from "Frontier Days." So even if you have "Get Tough," you will still need "Frontier Days" for "Wastin' Time Talkin'" "Love Among the Ruins," and "Shame on You." "Rolling Stone" described The Del-Lords as the great guitar band of the 1980s. Listen to this CD and you will know why.
Also recommended: "Johnny Comes Marching Home" and "Based on a True Story." Unlike the first two albums. "Based on a True Story" was released on CD at the same time that the vinyl version came out. "Based on a True Story" contains "Judas Kiss," the closest thing to a hit The Del-Lords had and one of their finest songs.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Del-Lords straight ahead Rock n Roll, June 7, 2010
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This review is from: Frontier Days (Audio CD)
The Del-Lords "Frontier Days" is your basic rock n roll record and what's wrong with that? 15 tunes on this CD with each with its own personality. This record may not be for everyone. But for me it's easy rock n roll listening. So thanks to uncle Manny for putting up the money for this effort way back when.
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Frontier Days
Frontier Days by Del-Lords (Audio CD - 2009)
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