Ike Turner was a musical giant whos been largely excised from rock history because of his rather objectionable past personal habits (i.e., snorting Himalayan-sized mountains of blow and smacking around then-wife Tina). Of course, we live in a culture of forgiveness, so it was inevitable old Ike would rise again. Here and Now is his first record in two decades and despite the title, theres little about it that sounds very here and now. In fact, its charm lies in the fact that its swaggering R&B groove sounds almost completely unaffected by the last 45 years of musical history. Tore Up, a rollicking slab of B.B. Kingstyle classic blues, shows off Ikes talent as both a bandleader and a knife-edged guitar player, while the down-and-dirty Catfish Blues finds him equally adept at roughing up some country blues. Hes also a helluva piano player (Ikes Theme). But its a re-recording of his early rocknroll classic Rocket 88 (which predated Elvis arrival by almost five years) that makes it shamefully apparent that Ike, at least as a musician, is a man overdue some respect.