
Primitive Ring is a new Los Angeles-based power trio that features Bert Hoover on bass and vocals, Charles Moothart on guitar and vocals, and Jon Modaff on drums. The three share solid backgrounds in prior bands (more info below) but are kicking it into high heavy rock gear with their self-titled full-length debut, which comes out May 15 on vinyl and digital through In the Red Records. The album’s 11 songs are a fuzzy, psych-tinged, hard-rocking good time.
Along with Primitive Ring, Bert Hoover’s credits include Cab 20, GROOP, Mind Meld, Jesus Sons, and Hooveriii. Charles Moothart has contributed to Fuzz, the Ty Segall Band, GØGGS, The Preverts, Charlie & the Moonhearts, and CFM. Jon Modaff has taken part in Sweet Country Meat Boys, Frankie and the Witch Fingers, GROOP, and Hooveriii.
This supergroup-ish joining of forces commenced in 2024 and the following year the band cut four 45s beginning with “In the Ground” b/w “Golden in Your Eyes” on Greenway Records, followed by “Poisonous Gift” b/w “TV City” on In the Red, then “Luck” b/w “I’ve Been Waiting For You” via The Reverberation Appreciation Society, and finally “Rolling Greed” b/w “Cocaine Man” on Fuzz Club.
These are all worthy efforts that establish the extended pummeling of this full-length set, which finds Primitive Ring ramping it up a few tangible notches, as opener “Fire and Brimstone” swaggers with an almost glam punk feel. “The Last Gold Mine” extends this heavy groove and then “Lies from the Other Side” picks up the pace and solidifies the power trio stature with an utter torcher.



Up in It emerged in 1990 and was an immediate breath of fresh air. A whole lot of loud and heavy stuff was steamrolling toward a point of detonation, but the Afghan Whigs essentially came out of nowhere and infused the template with better than average songwriting right out of the gate. The LP’s best song is its opener, “Retarded” an almost ridiculously catchy hard rocker reinforcing that Dulli and company weren’t just hitched to a trend on the upswing. It’s sort of cut that can get stuck in one’s head for days, as this writer can attest, and reinvestigation has proved this capability undiminished.
Willie Dunn’s best-known song is “I Pity the Country,” in large part because it was one of two recordings featured on Native North America (Vol. 1). That revelatory compilation, GRAMMY®-nominated and prominent in numerous year’s best lists including the top 10 reissues offered by this very website, smartly placed “I Pity the Country” as track one on side one.










I suppose it’s possible to review Game, Dames and Guitar Thangs without mentioning Hazel’s role in Parliament-Funkadelic, but I’m not sure what purpose that would serve, particularly as so many of his bandmates contribute to it, specifically bassists Bootsy Collins and William “Billy Bass” Nelson, drummer Tiki Fulwood, keyboardist Bernie Worrell, guitarists Michael Hampton, Gary Shider, Glenn Goins, and those Brides of Funkenstein, Dawn Silva and Lynn Mabry. Additionally, George Clinton had a hand in writing all four of the record’s originals, with Hazel a co-writer on two of them.









































