Alan Vega followed his stark solo debut with Collision Drive, a 1981 album that broadened his sound while sharpening its bite. Where the first record offered a stripped, minimalist spin on rockabilly and blues, this follow-up leans into a rougher, more combustible approach. Vega’s lyrics draw on his long-standing fascinations—street life, science fiction, politics, comics, love—capturing the turbulence and defiance that shaped his world.
A live drummer and hard rock backing band replace the drum machines of his debut, giving the album a heavier, more volatile pulse. The punk rockabilly of ‘Magdalena 82’ coils around sliding guitars and fevered momentum, while his take on ‘Be Bop A Lula’ twists Gene Vincent’s classic into an intense, unhinged howl. Elsewhere, the driving ‘Raver’ pushes toward psychobilly, showing an artist constantly shifting his edges.
Throughout Collision Drive, Vega refines his aesthetic without ever softening it—restless, forceful, and always forging his own path.
A live drummer and hard rock backing band replace the drum machines of his debut, giving the album a heavier, more volatile pulse. The punk rockabilly of ‘Magdalena 82’ coils around sliding guitars and fevered momentum, while his take on ‘Be Bop A Lula’ twists Gene Vincent’s classic into an intense, unhinged howl. Elsewhere, the driving ‘Raver’ pushes toward psychobilly, showing an artist constantly shifting his edges.
Throughout Collision Drive, Vega refines his aesthetic without ever softening it—restless, forceful, and always forging his own path.
Pickup available at Dreamhouse Records London
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