Music review: Joan Jett and the Blackhearts – ‘Unvarnished’
ItĢƵ time to put another dime in the jukebox. Joan JettĢƵ first new studio album since 2006ĢƵ “Sinner” is a stimulating confluence of brash garage rock and stylish glam musings.
The 55-year-old singer delivers her most personal material by trading in her normal song themes of rebellious fun for introspective examinations of love, life and mortality.
The Philadelphia native has always made it known she loves rock ‘n’ roll and “Unvarnished” continues the sexy sirenĢƵ tradition of classic three-chord guitar riffs, participatory choruses and infectious handclaps. “Any Weather” opens the album with Dave Grohl on drums as JettĢƵ tough-girl vocals spar with her signature, crunchy guitar licks. “TMI” possesses traces of Gary GlitterĢƵ British Glam while “Soulmates to Strangers” is a retro-sounding relationship-gone-band tune.
“Hard to Grow Up” and “Fragile” find Jett pondering the vulnerability and uncertainty of life and love as one gets older.
“Since I’m no good for you and you’re no good for me/LetĢƵ be as bad as we can be,” sings Jett on the rousing “Bad as We Can Be.”
Once a band girl, always a bad girl I guess.
Jett does reveal a softer side on the tender ballad “Everyone Needs a Hero,” complete with strings, oboe and English horn.
I fondly remember being smitten with the female rocker after hearing 1981ĢƵ “Bad Reputation” debut release. The album featured “Do Ya Wanna Touch Me (Oh Yeah),” “You Don’t Own Me,” featuring the Sex Pistols’ Steve Jones and Paul Cook and grungy cover of Eddie CochranĢƵ “Summertime Blues.”
The title track remains my favorite Jett song. JettĢƵ solo work was pure, straight-up rock ‘n’ roll fueled by songs like “I Love Rock ‘n’ Roll,” “Light of Day,” “Love is All Around” and “Crimson and Clover.”
The latest material is a return-to-form release for Jett, who continues to leave a mark long after bursting on the scene as a member of the Runaways along with Lita Ford and Cherie Currie.
It is well worth it to find the Special Extended Version of “Unvarnished,” featuring live versions of “Bad Reputation,” “Cherry Bomb,” “TMI” and “I Hate Myself for Loving You.”