Navigation

ASG

As ASG pumps out stoner metal/hard rock, the Raleigh-rooted outfit's album covers lay bare its interests. The 2002 self-titled effort features a woodcut of a topless woman. The Amplification of Self-Gratification, from 2003, spits at subtlety: Here a near-naked harlot leans on an amp dressed in Old Glory and cools...
Share this:

As ASG pumps out stoner metal/hard rock, the Raleigh-rooted outfit's album covers lay bare its interests. The 2002 self-titled effort features a woodcut of a topless woman. The Amplification of Self-Gratification, from 2003, spits at subtlety: Here a near-naked harlot leans on an amp dressed in Old Glory and cools her crotch with a bottle of Jack Daniel's. Feeling Good Is Good Enough, from 2005, features a disorienting, high-contrast picture of shears and flowers that suspiciously resembles Black Flag's Everything Went Black comp. Finally there's the band's latest album, Win Us Over, from 2007. Its cover spotlights — no surprise — curvy dames, this time in bright psychedelic symmetry. If you are expecting Win to be loaded with testosterone, you're correct — most of the time. "Dream Song" intends to decimate, and "The Dull Blade" revels in its weighty complexity. These riffs are thick. Yet just as the party gets going, ASG's sound softens. The morning-after meandering of "Coffee Depression Sunshine" dwells in modern radio lethargy. Then there are the overbearing histrionics found in "Taking Me Over": "In a land where love is forsaken/It's kinda hard to climb out of these holes/And it stains, yeah, it stains your soul." When ASG's rock gets to rock, it's rock solid; when tenderized, it's trite.

KEEP NEW TIMES FREE... Since we started New Times, it has been defined as the free, independent voice of South Florida, and we'd like to keep it that way. Your membership allows us to continue offering readers access to our incisive coverage of local news, food, and culture with no paywalls. You can support us by joining as a member for as little as $1.