From the ashes of the legendary Vanilla Fudge emerged several bands: Cactus and Boomerang. Cactus was led by drummer Carmine Appice and bassist Tim Bogert, while keyboardist Mark Stein would form the core of Boomerang. To form Boomerang, Stein recruited several unknown musicians, starting with guitarist Richard Rameriz, bassist Jo Casmir, and drummer James Galluzi. Their only release was the self-titled "Boomerang," a decent hard rock album that drew from the sonic sources of other contemporary bands such as Vanilla Fudge, Led Zeppelin, and Steppenwolf, but with a clear psychedelic undercurrent. Rameriz's heavy guitar riffs, Stein's dense organ, and the dusty, southern rock-influenced rhythm are the common denominator of an album that, despite containing a commendable repertoire, would fail spectacularly, overshadowed by the success of his former bandmates in Cactus. Powerful hard rock tracks like "Cynthia Fever", "The Peddler" or "Juke", the country rock "Hard Time", the bluesy boogie "Mockinbird", the attractive southern rock "Fisherman" or the melodic ballad "Brother's Comin' Home", have enough merit for this release to have had greater media and commercial recognition.


No comments:
Post a Comment