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Prelude to the End of the Dawn of Destruction BY Jim Jacobi-Crap Detector - Summer of 2011
Ginger Coyote Punk Globe Magazine Sept.2011
Another genius release from the original "King Of Psychobilly" Mr. Jim Jacobi... This is the 4th solo project that Jim Jacobi has released... Jim who hails from Omaha Nebraska is exploring with his music with different types of musical genres.. This CD has many hidden homages to other musicians and musical styles.. Let's hope that track #18 "The End Is Near" does not happen soon because I feel we need more Jim Jacobi. Ms. Carole Zacek who can be heard doing back up vocals on track #11 "Stupid" also helped design the cover with Mr. Jacobi.. Jim has only one request and that is you PLAY IT LOUD
CRESCENDO REVIEWS
Jim Jacobi from Omaha, Nebraska is a true to the bone musician and he has made it his mission to give the world his own brand of garage music... Hi band The Crap Detector's do well playing a mixture ska, punk, jazz and grunge on this CD... Jim Jacobi like the late Buck Naked (Buck Naked and The Bare Bottomed Boys) is doing his best to make Nebraska proud... Celebrating over 30 years in the industry this is Jim Jacobi/ Crap Detector's 22nd release... Jello Biafra has written liner notes for several his releases.The band has opened for Wayne Kramer, Reverend Horton Heat and The New Bohemians... He has been called one of the most underrated people in music..The music is fun gritty with a true sense of humor... Help Jim celebrate his 60th Birthday check this release out now.... You can find the CD at CD Now..... By: Ginger Coyote PUNK GLOBE 12/7/2010
Every song is an all-out blitz of gritty guitar, driving drums, rumbling bass, and greasy saxophone. Rock: Psychobilly. Jim Jacobi. Crescendo ... www.cdbaby.com/Style/748 CDbaby Dec, 2010
Jim Jacobi is an incorrigible, wryly sarcastic, phenomenon of rock that you need to hear. Describing him and his latest release, titled Crescendo, is a bit like describing an elephant. His features are various, diverse, and pronounced. Maybe it is easier to tell you what he is not: he is not emo, he is not glam, and he is not pop should lay down some pretty good foundation stones for those of you who have yet to experience his raw, unapologetic, sardonic, Burroughs-esque dirges, that should capture the fields of everybody from metal to blues who truly appreciates the music of an original. With a definite punk leaning, this album also has a touch of country and blues and is convincing testimony of the enduring life of rock n roll.
Led along by the solid, and able hands of drummers T Roy D and Nium Charmed, this album lumbers along at its own speeds, in its own ways like a Twilight Zone; never predictable but always making sense, changing speeds along the way, echoing a diverse blend of albums such as Husker du's Zen Arcade, Sonic Youths Daydream Nation, The Stooges Fun House, Johnny Cash's the Blue Train, Nam June Paik 1958-1979, and with just a hint of metal, in a range akin to Goth country punker Johnny Dowd- but all his own.
Calling upon its listener to, "be a person- not a demographic..." the album has a lot to say in humorous and clever words and phrases: "casebook: the anti-social networking group", doctor, you're so powerful", "You really weren't the king of anything", "I thought when I was young the twenty-first century was going to be fun.", and "Avatards", rising to the climactic last word- from the incendiary live performance of UFO Abduction.
Adam Fogarty
Adam is not an Omaha Big Fish/Small ponder.
CORNFIELD SAVAGES 4/16/2009 (review)
This is the companion CD or sequel to “It got Too Deep!”
More varieties of music and sarcastic lyrics mark this 20th release from Jim Jacobi/Crap Detectors pointing out flaws in our system and things screwed up in modern society.
“Not every song is a serious rant against the system. In fact, underlying almost every track is a subtle sense of irony that the listener must pay close attention to in order to appreciate. Jacobi is actually quite funny. Combined with his unmistakable message of “f**k the system”, his style is original and genuine.”Cornfield savages” is another slap-in-the-face example of Jacobi’s punk rock power and endless pursuit of true independence in every sense of the word.” Kyle Eustice Omaha weekly April 29th 2009
Liner notes from “It Got Too Deep!” by Jello Biafra
“One of my few decent high skool experiences was American Literature class with Mr. Burns. He actually liked intelligent students, and encouraged me to write actual opinions on his assignments instead of parroting another book report. When he asked the class why Tom Sawyer was viewed as an American hero, I wrote it was because he lied, and manipulated people to get what he wanted. Watergate era or not, Mr. Burns told me I was the most cynical person he’d ever known; yet I’m told he cited my Sawyer essay to later classes, long before I mutated into Jello Biafra.
Once he asked me, “where did you get your ability to analyze people?” I said it was from being a lone wolf outside the circle, watching how others played games, followed mindless trends and went out of their way to make fools of themselves in an endless Escher drawing gone drastically wrong.
Since then, few people I know of have maintained such a dim third-eye view of our mindless rodent- like consumer behavior as Jim Jacobi, best known for his (mostly) punk project, The Crap Detectors. And Detect they have, starting clear back in 1978 with the debut L.P. “Victims of the Media.” It is not only one of the earliest and by far the rarest American punk L.P.’s, it is also the only one I know with a taped-on cover printed on one of those old ditto machines. Remember the aroma?
It seems like very few punk collectors who know them from their “Police State” single and numerous “Killed by Death”- type bootleg comps have any idea Jim and the Crap Detectors catalogue is so vast and so deep and continues with the same vision to this day. “Victims” opening title track sets the table for all to come. “Grade A” punk with occasional one of a kind forays into vintage avant-garde electronics. If anything, creating in near-total isolation seems to have sharpened both music and message, with songs like “Eichmannism”, “Slave of the New Wave”, “Want, Want, Want”, “Bitchy Mommy”, and even a pre-Tipper Gore caution on the back, “May be to (sic) intense for some people….Deprogramming may occur.” The second seven-inch from ’81 is “Expatriates from Reality”.
The follow-up is adorned with a junkyard photo of old broken toilets and includes “Equal Opportunity Paranoiac” and “Feed the Rats.” Even the more straight rock L.P.’s are called “Superficial World”, “Diseases on Display” and “Cut the Crap”(long before the Clash sort of copped to theirs) with songs like “Terrorist of the Heart”, “Intellectual Morons”, “Feeling Amputee” and more. All this when hardly anyone was hip to the now-worshipped underground explosions going on in London, New York, S.F. or L.A.—Let alone the cultural Death Valley of Lincoln, Nebraska.
Even in punk, very few artists big or small ever turn their lens on their peers, let alone their own audience. Jim does this in spades. He didn’t even hold back when he ventured beyond the Cornhusker Curtain and relocated to Seattle in the 90”s at its Flannel Hollywood peak. Instead of falling in with all the cool people hanging out on the street corners practicing their “I’m in a band” pose, he took on Grunge.
Now back in Nebraska with no “ I was in a band in Seattle dude” pose to cloud his work, Jim continues to hit many a nail on the head in ways I wish I had thought of myself. I respect him because he’s smart, he won’t back down, and remains deep down a genuine human being who still gives a shit. Against all odds and mainstream common sense, Jim continues his efforts to deprogram us from our anthill Disneyland so dumbed down, people actually want to become victims of the media. They even audition for it.
But does Jim Jacobi give up or suck it all in? No. Which is all the more reason why this better not be Jim or the Crap Detectors’ last album.
Yours in Frankenchrist…. Jello Biafra “
NEWS!! The Mary McPage Band has a new release “Drink With the Band” that has a cover of a Jojakimbi song. You can find Mary On Myspace/Facebook or on the web. If you crave the blues this where you’ll find the best.
Now living in COMAha, Nebraska, Jim finds the depths of B.S. overwhelming.
Go to CD baby to listen to and buy these CDs.
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