Album Reviews

Bottle Rockets: Bit Logic

Bottle Rockets
Bit Logic
(Bloodshot)
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

Brian Henneman is grouchy as hell and not going to take it anymore. So, in the singer-songwriter tradition of writing what you know, or in this case feel, the frontman/singer/songwriter/guitarist/founder of Festus, Missouri’s veteran Bottle Rockets put pen to paper and created an album about it.

Sure, thereโ€™s a bit of a โ€œget off my lawnโ€ aspect to his dismissal of technology on the opening title track. โ€œThis science ainโ€™t no fiction, itโ€™s the new way of keeping it real,โ€ he laments.ย But Henneman is too crafty and savvy a wordsmith to simply rant without employing the self-effacing sense of humor heโ€™s displayed throughout the bandโ€™s 25 years and 12 previous discs of banging out their tough, guitar-driven Americana in every dive bar or opening slot thatโ€™ll have โ€˜em.

The stories on Bit Logic are, like the best Bottle Rocketsโ€™ tunes, based around everyday slices of life. From extolling the beauty of a young girl and a nearly flawless old song in the Southern-fried โ€œHuman Perfection,โ€ to the twangy tribute for a classic C&W St. Louis area dive bar hangout named โ€œStovallโ€™s Groveโ€ (โ€œBeen there since 1935/ itโ€™s a little ways out but worth the drive โ€ฆ bring some cash โ€˜cause theyโ€™re old schoolโ€) to a folksy love letter for Hennemanโ€™s songwriting room decorated in โ€œKnotty Pineโ€ (โ€œthat room gives me hugs/ itโ€™s better than drugsโ€), thereโ€™s a lived-in effortlessness to Hennemanโ€™s lyrics that makes them, and the melodies that accompany them, honest and real.

Perhaps the discโ€™s centerpiece is โ€œBad Time To Be An Outlaw,โ€ where Henneman laments, in a spoken-word/near rap, the state of country music where fringe outlaws — which he both idolizes and feels a kinship to — have been dismissed in favor of slicker, prettier, more commercially palatable country. That leaves his band and its peers at a disadvantage since they clearly arenโ€™t going to sell out their raw two guitars, bass and drums rocking to move more units (โ€œMy musicโ€™s good but my income sucksโ€), especially at this late stage in their career.

Longtime associate Eric โ€œRoscoeโ€ Ambelโ€™s hands-off production captures the vibe in a hometown St. Louis studio where the congenial setting helps the music breathe. Things cool down for the closing acoustic โ€œSilver Ring,โ€ a tender love song and perhaps the bandโ€™s prettiest ballad, showing a less crusty, more affectionate side of Henneman. Despite his social frustrations, the guyโ€™s a softy at heart and his veteran band has seldom sounded better.