As
Creed continues on with his peripatetic career, some of the stuff that looked initially groundbreaking about his work almost seems quaint; thus, for instance, the weirdly cheesy art combination on the front cover and the pulp sci-fi illustrations elsewhere. All this said,
Busting is still more
Creed doings for
Creed people, though this effort is a decidedly mixed bag. Consisting of a variety of different sessions, studio and live, rather than one unified album, it's more a catch-all of
Creed trying out this and that with various different folks. The first four tracks are the studio cuts, all recorded with sometime sideperson
Z Sylver on synths at a Hawaiian studio. The most notable thing about them is actually a negative point:
Creed himself creates the percussion this time out via drum machines and loops. The too-clinical approach doesn't really mesh with the warm and weird wash of usual guitar and vocal noise all too well, though the tempo shifts on
"Screamer" and the squelchy effects on
"Alien Lady" help some.
"Hyperventilation" introduces the live cuts and darn well at that; it's
Creed mostly backed up by
Nik Turner's touring band, including fellow
Hawkwind refugee
Del Dettmar. It's quick but a great monster stomp, with
Turner's sax playing and
Dettmar's freaky synth work perfectly suited to the affair.
"Late Bloomer" and
"Lactating Purple" feature
Creed's own then-touring lineup doing the high volume honors from a Swiss date, while the final two tracks have
Creed with longtime
Rollins Band bassist
Andrew Weiss and his drummer brother
Jon having fun with a live-in-studio jam.
"Drowning Sin" is a long number, with
Creed feeding his vocals through distortion while happily doing the massive solo/drone thing throughout the increasing pace, while
"Bubble Butt," goofy title aside, cranks up the volume and lets fly. ~ Ned Raggett