A hyper-speed blast of ultra-polemical, left-wing
hardcore punk, and bitingly funny sarcasm, Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables still
stands today as the Dead Kennedys' signature statement. As one of the first
hardcore albums, it was a galvanizing influence on the musical and attitudinal
development of the genre, also helping to kick-start the fertile California
scene. The record's tactics are not subtle in the least; Jello Biafra's odd warble
and spat-out lyrics leave no doubt as to what he thinks, baiting his targets of
conservatism, violence, overbearing authority, and capitalist greed with a
viciously satirical sarcasm that keeps his unflinchingly political outlook from
becoming too didactic. The thin production dilutes some of the music's power,
but the ragged speed-blur still packs a wallop, and the hooks cribbed from surf
and rockabilly give it a gonzo edge. The song writing isn't consistent all the
way through the album, but classics like "Kill the Poor," "Let's
Lynch the Landlord," "Chemical Warfare," "California Über
Alles," and "Holiday In Cambodia" helped define the hardcore
genre and, thus, must be heard.