If there was any justice in the world, Ginger Wildheart, quite possibly the best living rock songwriter in Britain, would be a Grammy-laden peer of the realm; lauded, rewarded and extolled for his services to rock music. Yet, to coin that most passé of phrases, “everything happens for a reason”, because if that justice had been served, the obtuse fire that feeds the abrasive pummeling of Mutation III: Dark Black (Undergroove) would have been robbed of the oxygen of anger and normality of every day human existence that permeates each second of the excellence of extremity that Ginger and co-collaborator Scott Lee Andrews have forged.Continue reading