
Three chords, no-frills recording, and a joyful disregard of the mainstream: punk rock or old-time string band music? Answer: both.
Uncle Monk is the eponymous release of Tommy Ramoneโs most recent musical offering to the world, and although he initially made his mark as the first drummerโnot to mention producer and managerโof seminal punk band the Ramones, there is nary a drum on this CD. Alongside longtime partner Claudia Tienan, Ramone has traded in glue for moonshine, the basement for the back porch, and jeans forโฆwell, jeans.
In the โ70s, Ramone helped change the landscape of pop, but with Uncle Monk, the skilled multi-instrumentalistโhe sings and expertly lays down fiddle, dobro, mandolin, banjo, and guitarโhas sown his considerable energy into deeper musical strata. The resulting harvest of 14 originals references everything from the Carter Family to Hank Williams Sr., but on the way up from those deeply sunken roots there are audible traces of the Velvet Underground, acerbic folk, and the singer-songwriter confessional.
Tienanโwho also holds down bass and rhythm guitarโpossesses a dusky, Leonard Cohen-esque alto, which underpins the rollicking โEmotional Needsโ with a wry sensibility and casts shadows on the ironically titled โUrban Renewal.โ Ramoneโs more elastic vocals whoop, growl, and sob as he cavorts in the leaves in โHeavenโ and mourns convincingly for a broken friendship in โMean to Me.โ
Uncle Monk is a walk down a dusty two-lane blacktop with the lights of the big city glowing on the horizonโdistant but still present. www.unclemonk.com
This article appears in November 2007.








