ArtistRack brings to you the visuals for ‘Jersey Boy’ byΒ The Vice Rags:
So what does it mean to be a Jersey boy? A Jersey boy carries himself with a certain insouciance; thereβs a no-B.S. attitude and gruff swagger to everything he does. Heβs not impressed with awards or accomplishments β heβll judge you by the way you act, not by your reputation or your bankroll. And, to be frank, if youβre a Jersey boy, youβre probably more than a little annoyed by the way those other boys across the Hudson River behave. And letβs face it, they all come from somewhere else anyways. You might look askance at all the social climbing and the hyperbole common in Brooklyn and Manhattan. And should one of the New York boys manage to pinch your girl β lure her to the flashier side of the river β chances are, youβll have something to say about that.
Thatβs the predicament that the narrator of βJersey Boyβ, the latest single from the Asbury Park rock band The Vice Rags, finds himself in β and true to type, heβs not going down without a fight. Donβt call his story a lament, because Jersey boys donβt whine. Instead, βJersey Boyβ puts his case to his old flame in rough, plain language: thereβs nothing on the other side of those bridges and tunnels that he canβt provide better than the New Yorkers can.
The Vice Rags ought to know. Theyβre Jersey boys themselves β all four were members of popular, respected Jersey independent rock bands before joining their new outfit. Drummer Joe Chyb hit the skins for The Anderson Council, unparalleled channelers of the spirit of β60s psychedelia and garage rock. Guitarist Jack Roberts brought the six-string fire to the rollicking punks Mars Needs Women. Bassist GE (known to Jersey rock fans as βGay Elvisβ) was part of the irreverent Kid With Man Head, and he played with Vice Rags frontman Paul Rosevear in the fuzzed-out power pop band Readymade Breakup. These were very different bands β but they were united in a certain Jersey attitude and resourcefulness. They were fiercely independent acts with deep respect for rock history, and they were determined to build audiences for themselves on their own terms.
The Vice Rags are the inheritors of that Jersey indie tradition, and theyβve been championed by the regional press: The Deli, The Aquarian, and Real Gone have all praised the bandβs no-nonsense, back-to-basics, blue-collar rock approach. The clip for βJersey Boyβ is similarly unpretentious β just the group, a room in a practice space (with song titles scrawled in chalk on the wall for extra authenticity), electricity, and sweat. These four musicians are plainly having a blast, but itβs just as clear that they mean every pissed-off word theyβre singing. They wouldnβt be Jersey boys if they didnβt.






















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