EARTH EIGHTEEN - BUTTERFLY (1995)

Sounding for all the world like glammed-out rock & rollers enmeshed in a battle of wills with the flannelled, goateed alt-rock brigade, the songs on "
Butterfly" roil and seethe, sublimated only by early era giveaway drumbeats and vocalist John Dupree's occasional penchant for channeling the spirit of T. Rex's Marc Bolan. From the wonderful opener "
La La Song," which harkens back to a platform-booted era, to the light jibes at heavy metal meatheads on the heavy, hair-shaking "
Mechanimal," and on to the absolutely marvelous downer, "
The Fall Divine," this band proves proficient across a sonic jigsaw puzzle. Enjoyable and interesting across the board, it's a shame
Earth 18 were relegated to little more than a flash in the pan. It's possible that they may have revealed themselves to be a one-album kind of a band, but it's also plausible that, with a little time and leeway, they might have developed into something very special indeed.
AMGSongsLa La Song / Dolores Haze / Mechanimal / The Fall Divine / Goin' Steady / Dahlia / Maximum Teenage Overdrive / Girl Of The Downward Smile / Long Gone / Blood Revival 99 / 95