For Florida's sole remaining sex surrogate, love is a many splintered thing.
It's not just giant companies cashing in on America's defense industry.
How a throwaway idea at the Barkley ad agency became the "Sonic Guys."
A diner's guide to Texas's oldest Mexican restaurants.
Yet such sonic details don't represent the primary difference between the two volumes; rather, the distinguishing factor is that the first box contains all American artists, and this followup contains mostly British ones, with the occasional Australian, Japanese, or Brazilian contributors. The accents are obviously different: American Mick Jagger wannabes from the Sixties tended to bark, whereas even the most Americanized disciples from Britannia merely sneered. And where the Yanks on Nuggets I would nod toward tradition by tearing into yet another "Hey Joe" rewrite, the Redcoats push past the recording meter's red zone. Nuggets II is a more reverie-heavy collection, with occasional folkie interludes (acoustic guitars, ponderous woodwinds) balancing the testosterone-driven angst.
But other than these distinctions, both volumes espouse business as usual in teenage wasteland: Chicks are sought, chicks are uninterested, the rejected male howls his fury. And ultimately, the stack-flipping, chapped-fingered record collectors are entertained. The song titles say it all: "Your Body, Not Your Soul" by Cuby & the Blizzards, "You're Driving Me Insane" by the Missing Links, "Bad Little Woman" by the Wheels, "But You'll Never Do It Babe" by the Boos, "Kicks & Chicks" by the Zipps. Ah, this is truly geek-revenge paradise.
Well, not completely. This Rhino reissue features all the label's trademark moves along with all of its usual missteps. Mixed in with the masterworks are the marginal collectors' items (an unrecognizable David Bowie's debut single), overlooked gems (Them's "I Can Only Give You Everything" is chosen over the all-time garage raver "Gloria"), and kitsch (the Yanks got "Incense and Peppermints," so the Brits get "Pictures of Matchstick Men"). Yet lead compiler Greg Shaw has successfully pieced together a first quarter of garage music that admirably mirrors the first box's perfect keynote disc, which returned to circulation the original, Lenny Kaye-compiled 1972 vinyl double album that gave the series its name. Kaye's collection didn't exactly birth punk rock--it was more like the drunken gleam in its father's eye on the night of conception. Perhaps Nuggets II will help right the sorry state of current U.K. rock--and its sexually frustrated garage-revival boys--by bringing its passions to a similar fruition.