
Beaumont was particularly impressive reaching 25 off 17, finding the boundary with some incredible scoops and lap sweeps. They appeared on course for an easy victory having cruised to 1 for 85 in the 11th over. Molineux was finally held for 24 before Wyatt and Tammy Beaumont took control with a 48-run stand. The Scorchers dropped four catches and missed two clear cut run out opportunities to all but hand the Renegades the game as Josie Dooley guided her side home, making 17 not out off 17 balls, with four wickets and five balls to spare.įollowing Nat Sciver’s half-century in an under par total of 5 for 132, the Scorchers gave Sophie Molineux and Danielle Wyatt three lives in the first two overs of the chase. The Melbourne Renegades held their nerve to scrape past the Perth Scorchers in an error-riddled chase at the Junction Oval that was briefly halted when the fire alarm was triggered by some burnt toast. As a document, this is a field recording worth preserving, as a rock & roll record it's worth listening to over and over again.Melbourne Renegades 6 for 133 (Wyatt 31, Barsby 2-22) beat Perth Scorchers 5 for 132 (Sciver 55*, Strano 2-27) by four wickets The sound isn't perfect here, but more than adequate after a track or two, the music is so damn hot, it isn't even an issue. These songs they put their indelible stamp on, reclaiming them for their own generation, making sure they went on, wider, deeper than before, as valid for any rock & roll generation as they were for the pop and country generations that preceded them. However, what defines the Scorchers as a great band is the original manner in which they cover the songs of other people: from Leon Payne's "Lost Highway" and Williams' "You Win Again" and "Honky Tonk Blues" to John Fogerty's "Travelin' Band," Neil Young's "Are You Ready for the Country," and a version of Dylan's "Absolutely Sweet Marie" that would make Dylan proud - or jealous. They rip through their own gems like "Shop It Around," "Broken Whiskey Glass," "Hot Nights in Georgia," "Last Time Around," "White Lies," and "Pray for Me Momma - I'm a Gypsy Now," defining them as live songs as opposed to their recordings, which are also smokin'. It was as if they were playing for the audience at the U.S. But you'd never know it by the performance. What makes this disc so revelatory - by the way, it was mastered from an LP you can hear the pops but it adds to the set's rock & roll ethos - is that this gig was played in front of a sparse audience, referenced a few times by Jason throughout. Musically, the rockabilly and hard country styles of Williams and his contemporaries are wedded to punk rock's energy and hard rock's sophisticated musicality and comes off as raw as a scrape. And that was all they had, a shift in the hourglass before it got turned right side up again. Lastly, this is the sound of this band's moment. With Jason's killer songwriting and stage presence and Warren Hodges' truly otherworldly guitar playing (he is the definition of a "guitar slinger"), and an energy level most hardcore bands couldn't match - not for an hour and a half, anyway.


The Scorchers didn't need corny humor because they had all the pieces. Third, it was this unheralded unit that was the true wave rider for alt-country.

In fact, it can be argued there weren't any rock bands at all at the time except in the underground. (And don't give me a hard time about the Byrds or Lynyrd Skynyrd either - the Byrds weren't a hard rock band and Skynyrd only referenced country music, they used more of the blues in their mix.) Second thing is: They were one of the wildest live bands in America at the time, during a period where there wasn't exactly a lot of exciting live music. They owed as much to the Sex Pistols and the Clash as they did Hank Williams and Buck Owens.

In June of 1985, Jason & the Scorchers had proven to be the first totally country/totally hard rock band in the world. This "official" CD issue of a bootleg LP is many things: first, it's a portrait of this band at the height of their power.
