I distinctly remember the first time I heard a banjo and thought it was cool, in the spring of 1993. While the Butthole Surfers’ “The Ballad Of Naked Man” no longer holds the same power over me as it did when I was 15, it was what led me to the Bad Livers’ Horses In The Mines album, which sharply changed the course of my musical tastes, if not my entire post-adolescent development.
Jaxon Haldane, who goes by the name Dink Jebkins when he plays banjo for Winnipeg band the D. Rangers, undoubtedly comes to bluegrass from a punk rock perspective too. The group’s self-titled debut has at least as much in common with the Ramones’ Rocket To Russia as it does with the latest Alison Krauss or Del McCoury album.
There’s the assumed names, of course (muck bucket bass player “John T. Plumeray” is an easy classic), but more than anything there’s the unbridled energy of youth finally delivered of boredom; be it Manitoba or Queens, there’s no better reason to start a band than teenage doldrums. Their manic cover of Bob Wills’ “Take Me Back To Tulsa” is reminiscent of the Ramones’ remake of the Trashmen’s “Surfin’ Bird”.
As creeping gentrification looms large over bluegrass, it’s good to know there are still punks picking up banjoes and mandolins. While they certainly have the technical prowess to pull off more traditional bluegrass, the D. Rangers are thankfully unhinged enough to really rip it up.