W.A.S.P. – Still Not Black Enough (Castle, US and UK versions)
This one came up due to some discussion between myself and Jon Wilmenius who suggested that I not outright dismiss Still Not Black Enough. Â I decided to give it a listen again, all the tracks from both versions, and listen with an open mind. Â I haven’t listened to this album in years. Â I went through a brief W.A.S.P. phase not long after quitting the store. Â I bought Helldorado, Unholy Terror, and both Neon God CDs, which might not have been a good idea; doing so many at once.
Still Not Black Enough was a treat to revisit. Â It’s top-loaded with some pretty great W.A.S.P. songs. Â In fact the album rocks and rolls along quite excellently for four solid tracks in a row: Â “Still Not Black Enough”, “Skinwalker”, “Black Forever” and the awesome “Scared To Death”. Â I’ve never heard Blackie attempt anything like “Scared To Death” before. Â Female backing vocals on a W.A.S.P. album? Â It actually works, and brings this track to a much higher level. Â Nothing wrong with the other three songs either — all are catchy, heavy W.A.S.P. songs with that Crimson Idol sound.
The album skids to a halt upon track 5, “Goodbye America”. Â The unfortunate thing is that “Goodbye America” is a great W.A.S.P. song, kinda similar to “Chainsaw Charlie”, like a shorter twin brother. Â Blackie chose to introduce it with a boring, spoken word political thing, which sucks all the air out of the room. Â Cut the shit, Blackie. Â You’re a rock star who drinks fake blood from a fake skull for a living. Â Leave the politics to Bono on the left and Ted on the right. Â Shit, even Ted doesn’t write his songs about it.
After a rousing cover of Jefferson Airplane’s “Somebody To Love”, Blackie gets out the piano and does the first ballad of the album. Â It’s essentially a reprise to “Hold Onto My Heart” from Crimson Idol. Â It’s even called “Keep Holding On”. Â Nice song, but no need to do it twice. Â OK sure, “Keep Holding On” is a different slant, on a lot of different instruments, but it’s the same damn song.
“Rock And Roll To Death” is both old (previously released on 1993’s excellent First Blood…Last Cuts compilation) and too gimmicky. Â It’s an old-timey rock and roll song a-la Chuck Berry played metal style. Â I guess it’s supposed to sound like “old W.A.S.P.”, like “Blind In Texas”? Â Regardless it’s out of place on Still Not Black Enough, and it was already on the last album, so to me, that means “delete”.
The original ten-track version of the CD placed a ballad here, after “Rock And Roll To Death”. Â The acoustic-with-strings ballad “Breathe” was removed from the re-release, and I get why. Â It’s similar once again to Crimson Idol songs like “The Idol” and “Hold On To My Heart”. Â The actual sonic quality of the song is not good at all, it sounds like a demo. Â The drums are obviously not real, they sound like a drum program. Â The strings are obviously synth. Â It sounds unfinished, compared to the rest of the album.
No matter which version of the CD you buy, track 9 is “I Can’t”. Â It’s also acoustic, so again it’s good they removed “Breathe” from the CD, two acoustic songs in a row is too much for a W.A.S.P. album. Â This one’s a little edgier, it’s not a ballad. Â It’s more a cheesy bad-ass cowboy song with gratuitous “fucks”. Â Thankfully it turns electric at the end. Â Track ten, and original album closer, is “No Way Out Of Here” which sounds like any number of songs from Crimson Idol. Â The similarities are more than superficial. Â There are lyrical references to that album, and both albums were performed by the same band: Â Frankie Banali and Bob Kulick.
The re-release of Still Not Black Enough has three bonus tracks. Â (It also has “Skinwalker” which was track 2, but not on the original release of the CD.) Â Track 11 is “One Tribe”, which is pretty different and pretty cool. Â It’s a softer song, but it’s about the most original song on the album. Â It has strong melodies, and a dramatic enough arrangement. Â There’s also what sounds like an electric violin solo! Â Lyrically, this sounds like redemption.
Then come the unnecessary covers: Â “Tie Your Mother Down” and “Whole Lotta Rosie”. Â Of the two, I would say “Tie Your Mother Down” works best. Â It brings back the female backing vocals from “Scared To Death” and it’s fun! Â “Whole Lotta Rosie” isn’t particularly notable.
I was surprised that I like Still Not Black Enough as much as I do. Â I dismissed it outright years ago as an inferior clone of Crimson Idol. Â It has moments like that, most definitely. Â It’s also a pretty enjoyable listen, and now that I’ve dusted it off, I’ll spin it a couple more times. Â Regardless of which version you get (track listings for both below), I think Still Not Black Enough is worth about:
3.5/5 stars

