Classic Rock

Tuk Smith & The Restless Hearts

Ballad Of A Misspent Youth

- Dave Everley

Former Biters frontman returns with sparkling sort-of-solo debut album.

It’s a small miracle that Ballad Of A Misspent Youth has come into the world. After Tuk Smith’s previous band, Atlanta punk’n’roll heroes Biters, fizzled out in 2019, worn down by the apathy of a public oblivious to their brilliance, Smith recorded an album for US label Better Noise, home of Mötley Crüe and The Hu, only to have it shelved mid-pandemic due to behind-the-scenes shenanigan­s. No one would have blamed him if he’d walked away from the whole shit-show. But he didn’t, and thank the gods of rock’n’roll for that.

Short, sweet and crammed with maximum tuneage, Ballad Of A Misspent Youth is a love letter to the intoxicati­ng power of music. The lack of success

Smith achieved with Biters is in inverse proportion to the undiluted greatness of his songwritin­g. The gleaming melodies of the title track and Shadows On The Street feel like they’ve been unearthed from some great lost album released some time between Tom Petty & The Heartbreak­ers’ first album and Cheap Trick’s In Color.

Smith is in love with the myths and heroes of rock’n’roll, and this album bears traces of Petty, Bruce Springstee­n, Bob Seger, Big Star and Thin Lizzy in its DNA. The spiralling Girls On The East Side Of Town is a glorious Thin Lizzy homage, relocating their freewheeli­ng Celtic spirit to smalltown America and making the connection between Phil Lynott and Springstee­n as kindred spirits separated by an ocean. Tellingly, the punk influences that were evident in Biters’ music have been dialled back. Ain’t For The Faint, with its glam-powered riff and stacked backing vocals, is a solid-gold radio rock hit – or it would be if there were any radio stations left that would play it.

The album title itself is misleading. Ballad Of A Misspent Youth may seem to celebrate the romance of rebellion, but Smith has seen the dark side of the business, and a cautionary undercurre­nt swims beneath these uplifting songs. Say Goodbye’s stirring melody can’t quite mask its fatalism: ‘Say goodbye to the world tonight,’ he sings, aware that the lifestyle can be as sad and damaging as it is celebrator­y. Everyone Loves You When You’re Dead is even more explicit: this is Smith’s ode to fallen friends and idols. Yet even in its most reflective moments Ballad Of A Misspent Youth is never less than exhilarati­ng. Just the way rock’n’roll should be.

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