He has his down moments on the album, but songs like "Ain't It a Bitch" and "Here Before You" make up for the weaknesses. His music sounds fresher than many of those roots-rockers because he just wants to play, not preserve heritage, but the ironic thing is when he's on, he's a better songwriter than almost any of them. None of his contemporaries are even trying for this kind of unassuming, straightforward, well-crafted hard rock, and by pursuing this direction so doggedly (he even covers Berry's "Memphis"), he sounds like a throwback to another era, much like all the Americana bands of the late '90s. And Stradlin is a roots-rocker by this point. There also isn't anything quite as good as his underappreciated classic-in-waiting "Shuffle It All," but 117 Degrees rocks harder than most roots-rock albums of the late '90s. 117 Degrees picks up right where The Ju Ju Hounds left off, offering a set of 14 bluesy hard rockers in the vein of Chuck Berry, the Stones, the Faces, Aerosmith and, yes, Guns N' Roses. Well, Izzy Stradlin sure didn't spend the five and a half years between his first two solo records rethinking his music.
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June 2023
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