by Mark Deming
Of the bands that emerged from the early New York punk rock scene, the Dictators were on the scene before nearly everyone else (their first album preceded
the Ramones
' debut by a year), and while they dug the fast-loud stuff, their sound was informed by hard rock, '60s garage punk, and the glories of American trash culture as much as anything that was happening at CBGB. Being ahead of the game had one unfortunate consequence for the Dictators -- while they had a valuable ally in
Blue 脰yster Cult
producer
Sandy Pearlman
, trusting a guy with a taste for smart heavy metal to get this band's intelligently dumbed-down sound on plastic may not have been the best strategy, and though the band made a pair of great albums in the '70s (
The Dictators Go Girl Crazy!
and
Bloodbrothers
), it wasn't until 2001's reunion set
D.F.F.D.
that the Dictators finally hit the right balance of simplicity and force in the studio. The sad irony is that the Dictators had the formula worked out all along if someone had simply trusted them to do it themselves, judging from the evidence presented on Every Day Is Saturday, a collection of rarities and unreleased tracks from the group's archives. The highlights of this disc are a five-song demo recorded prior to the sessions for
Go Girl Crazy!
and eight more demos recorded at the band's rehearsal space featuring all the original tunes from
Bloodbrothers
, and in both cases the rough tapes beat the official versions for energy, attitude, and sheer rockability (and if the fidelity isn't always as great, fans should be more than willing to make that tradeoff). The
Go Girl Crazy!
demos also include two songs that didn't make it onto the album, &Backseat Boogie& and &Fireman's Friend,& and they shake out hard and wild. Every Day Is Saturday also offers up an early and clearly superior recording of &Sleeping with the TV On,& two takes of
Andy Shernoff
's ode to Peter Pan Syndrome &16 Forever,& the fine B-side &Loyola,& a pair of outtakes from
D.F.F.D.
, and a handful of radio spots (including one in which New York's proudest sons play a barbecue festival in Kentucky!). In lieu of the &greatest-hits& album the Dictators' deserve, Every Day Is Saturday offers an admirable summary of their career to date, complete with liner notes from
Scott Kempner
and
Handsome Dick Manitoba
, and serves up their music like a good steak -- hot, rare, just a little bloody, and without a bunch of garnish getting in the way. It's a real treat for fans, and not a bad introduction for the uninitiated (and if you fall into the latter category, what are you waiting for?).