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Redneck Wonderland
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Redneck Wonderland

Reviewed in The Boston Phoenix

Midnight Oil may never again achieve as potent a mix of music and message as they did on their visceral calssics as 10-1 and Diesel and Dust, but they're going to bleed their guts trying. This CD's "White Skin Black Heart", with its charges of neo-Nazism, is the most potent hate letter any '90's outift has written to race-baiting politicians. "Seeing is Believing" doesn't just grieve for a soiled earth - it's also about the way we've polluted the human spirit through the exploitation of, well, everything. For that matter, the whole album, with its mournful portraits of corporate egotists at the helm and ineffectual statesmen and complacent citizens, is a bleak, bleak, bleak view of modern times reinforced by Peter Garret's atypically low-key vocal delivery and the CD's high population of ballads and minor-key melodies.

Which puts Redneck Wonderland (in stores this Tuesday) in a bind, Midnight Oil are always best when they rock, which they've done with brass-knuckled authority - even when singing about genocide - and which has helped keep the group from seeming too preachy and dour. But it's obvious from these lyrics that Garrett and crew now think we're all about to be left swinging in the wing. And rocking out might trivialize that, or encourage some listeners to cruise over the meanings of these 12 tales. Its a tricky balance - setting music and message to equal weight. Here, message tips the scale.

Rated: ***

Reviewer: Unknown