The Reatards exploded into a fireball of guitar-powered adolescent rage on their debut album, 1998's
Teenage Hate, and if they got a bit tighter and recorded themselves with a dash more care on their second album, 1999's
Grown Up, Fucked Up, in neither case did it get in the way of what
Jay Reatard and his bandmates did best -- blowing up manic, primitive punk rock with an abundance of crude energy and the ferocious attitude that comes with being 18 years old and pissed off at practically everything surrounding you. With Sean Redd on second guitar and Rich Crook on drums,
Reatard had a pair of collaborators who were capable of keeping up with him on
Grown Up, Fucked Up, which is a pretty impressive achievement in itself, but as lead singer, guitarist, main songwriter, and all-around vision guy with
the Reatards,
Jay was the star of this album, and he doesn't let go of the spotlight for a moment. These 16 songs may be simple, but
Reatard had a way of finding actual melodies and hooks in his jagged fragments of punk rock mayhem, and even when his snarling rage is at its most over the top, there's a street kid's sincerity and the recognizable pain of a broken heart in his performances that make this something much more than just another seething high school kid with a cheap guitar. Plenty of punk rockers are good at projecting anger, but
Reatard seethed with something more than the usual Young Male Bile, and
Grown Up, Fucked Up shows how much he had to say just under the grimy surface of these tunes, and one can hear faint clues of the somewhat more sophisticated music he would make with
Lost Sounds and as a solo artist. [In 2015, after years out of print, Goner Records gave
Grown Up, Fucked Up a reissue, remastered from the original tapes and including the three songs from
the Reatards' "Your So Lewd" 7" as a bonus. The new edition includes liner essays from Eric Friedl (
Reatard's one-time bandmate and one of the proprietors of Goner Records) and Meghan Smith (a friend and fan who brought
Reatard and his band to Empty Records, who originally released the album), both of whom bring an honest sense of loss to their memories of
Reatard.] ~ Mark Deming