The Hellacopters
with Quadrajets
Echo Lounge, Atlanta
May 9, 1999
by Frank Mullen
They came from the land of the ice and snow, to party like it's 1979. With a new record ( Grande Rock on Sub Pop) sounding like outtakes from KISS' first album, the Hellacopters (from Sweden) prove their versatility by playing both kinds of music -- rock AND roll. Close your eyes, take a long drink of hard liquor, and try to imagine if Chuck Berry had grown up listening to the Stooges and Mötörhead. That's the Hellacopters.
I wondered if there was something in Sweden's water that might explain this time warp. Then I considered whether the sights and sounds of American TV and radio might only now be arriving in their country, twenty years later? Finally, I decided, "who cares?" The Hellacopters kicked my ass and that of a hundred or so sweaty metalheads. Why ask "why?"
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photo by Frank Mullen |
The encore began with the band noodling around with the riffs from "Cat Scratch Fever" and Skynyrd's "Needle and the Spoon," then launching into a couple more earsplitters. After the classic ending of guitars shoved against the amps to create a wall of noise and feedback, there was one lone lighter in the back of the room. The band had rocked and rolled all night -- they deserved better.
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