Rachel Flotard and Ben Hooker return kicking, five years after the Seattle trio's sophomore effort
Sunset on Dateland. The half-decade disappearance has had no deleterious effect on their big, heavy, melodic attack, despite the loss of northwest punk pioneer bassist Kim Warnick to retirement. The punky crunch of
Sunset and 2003's hot
King Me may have dissipated a soupçon without Warnick's tough punk-chick chops, but with
Nirvana/
Foo Fighters and
King Me producer Barrett Jones manning the position -- and returning as engineer/co-producer --
Visqueen's wild wallop remains hard 'n' tight. Perhaps their sound just tips closer to
Cheap Trick now than Warnick's
Fastbacks, though fellow ex-
Fastback Kurt Bloch mixed this. (Scattered piano, organ, horns, pedal steel, cello, etc. add superb new depth and color, too.) And though there are copious guest stars such as
Neko Case (on five songs; Flotard has similarly backed
the New Pornographers, and
Case, for years) and
the Long Winters' John Roderick; the high-energy, uptempo, elastic blast of
Visqueen is Flotard's stock in trade, with her kick-ass licks (augmented by new second guitarist Tom Cummings), her commanding thick pipes and compassionate lyrics, and Hooker's slam-banging. Man, it's great to have them back. ~ Jack Rabid, The Big Takeover