The Mighty Mighty Bosstones Deliver Career-Spanning Set
The Mighty Mighty Bosstones â Webster Hall â August 21, 2019
Where the Mighty Mighty Bosstones land on the list of Bostonâs greatest musical exports is a subject of much debate. What isnât up for debate is what the now-35-years-going-strong band did to help repopularize ska, marry it with sneering punk and further juice it with solid pop songcraft, occasionally enough to be radio-friendly and nationally known.
Funny thing, though, about the Bosstones: They donât play like theyâve been at it through the feast and famine acceptance of what they do for nearly four decades, or that itâs been four, two or even one decade. No, Dicky Barrett and company play like itâs just as vital as it felt back then, when checkered ska found a like-minded dance partner with punk and elements of other genres, keeping just enough soul and even a little R&B in the bleating, blasting horn section to avoid a full-blown tip-over into grimy hardcore. The nine-pieceâincluding, as ever, beloved skanking dancer and tour manager Ben Carrâroared into Webster Hall on Wednesday night, and if you were generous about a few extra facial wrinkles and gray beards, you could swear it was 1994, and theyâd just come through Taang! Records on their way to mainstream success.
Last night their headlining set felt like an anthology, mixing the best-knowns (âThe Rascal King,â âSomeday I Suppose,â âThe Impression That I Getâ) with nuggets from all across their catalog. âA Reason to Toastâ is from the early 2000s and âYou Left, Right?â from late in that decade. âHope I Never Lose My Walletâ (whoa!) goes all the way back to 1989, and âKinder Wordsâ is almost just as old. Thereâs newish music, too, and the band had a few to serve from last yearâs While Weâre At It, one of their most aggressive albums, along with covers theyâve been doing forever (the Wailersâ âSimmer Downâ) and jaw-drop rarities (we see you, Murphyâs Lawâs âCavity Creepsââwith special guest Jimmy Gestapo, to boot).
That they donât fuss a lot is not to be confused with businesslike. Barrett and friends charm the shit out of you even when they get on a tear and one song seems to become the bouncing, skanking, rocking, grinding next one before youâve even caught a breath. The final song of the encore, âA Pretty Sad Excuse,â seemed to roll it all up into one, protracted ending: a laid-back, loping reggae bounce with a little soul thrown in that opened up to a big, bash-it-out finale. Had the place going apeshit, just the way the Bosstones always do it. âChad Berndtson | @Cberndtson
Photos courtesy of Brian C. Reilly | www.briancreilly.com












