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Monthly Archives: June 2021

Almost summer singles mixtape II

27 Sunday Jun 2021

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Poprock Themepark

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Brad Marino, Career Woman, Crowded House, Cult Stars From Mars, Deadlights, Donaher, Drew Beskin, Flying Underground, Freedom Fry, Irene Pena, Jeff Shelton, Jenny, Kevin Robertson, Melody Caudill, Purses, Richard X. Heyman, Stephen's Ruin, Stoeckel and Pena, summer, Suspect Parts, The Connections, The Memories, The Putz, The Red Locusts, The Spongetones, The Strypes, The Vapour Trails, They Might Be Giants, Tim Jackson, Zen Arcade

Day in, day out, new singles arrive at our Poprock Record headquarters. It’s a wonder we can keep the Technics 1200 turntable running smoothly what with all the needle dropping going on. Especially today with the second installment of our ‘almost summer’ single mixtape event. So get ready for another twenty – that’s 20! – solid selections for your perusal and possible inclusion on a seasonal singles mixtape.

The arrival of any new recording from Aberdeen’s jangle heavyweights The Vapour Trails is something to cherish. Now that band’s main songwriter/guitarist Kevin Robertson has a solo album but it’s something a bit different. On Sundown’s End Robertson goes exploring stylistically and the results are pretty sweet. Case in point: title track “Sundown’s End.” It kicks off with a very VT guitar hook but as it develops the song moves in a more rocky psychedelic direction than we’re used to. Another guy moving in new directions is Jeff Shelton. The hardest working man in powerpop show business has a new project: Deadlights, a slightly more dreamy take on his usual pristine poprock goodness. Turns out, his new path ends up in basically the same place he usually goes, with solid tunes, earwormy hooks, and enticing playing all over the record. Opening cut “Breaking Down” sounds very REM to me with great swirl of vocals and catchy lead guitar lines. Turning to yesterday’s heartthrobs even working class dogs can learn new tricks, if Rick Springfield’s latest release is anything to go by. Album 22 for Springfield has hit the racks under the moniker The Red Locusts and the results are fantastic. The mild jangle, the harmonica, the big rhythm guitar chords and Rick’s great vocal make “Another Bad Day for Cupid” a should-be hit single. The album is like the Wonders meet the Romantics, it’s that fun. From the ‘never lets you down’ file, Brad Marino is a guy who knows what he likes and he delivers it again and again. His solo work and records with The Connections effectively mine the neo-1950s, post pub rock sound of bands like Rockpile to perfection. But on Looking for Trouble Marino leans into Merseybeat on cuts like “Fell in Love Again.” Love the chime on the guitar and sweet harmonies. Was it just a year ago I was singing the praises of formerly-from-Portland band The Memories? The album was Pickles and Pies and the song I couldn’t get out of my head was mini folk masterpiece “Second Try.” Well they’re back with something that is nothing like that. They’ve segued into a kind of Donovan-meets-Jonathan Richman motif on a new EP Beautiful Sunrise, and particularly with the goofy “Banana.” I mean, who doesn’t like a whistling solo? This definitely sounds like beach blanket material.

Seventeen year old Melody Caudill is back with her Career Woman project, still blending an Elliott Smith esthetic into her work with a new shoe-gazy single, “Balcony.” Once again the guitars are up front (though perhaps toned down a bit from her prior “Teacher’s Pet” single), particularly early on in the solo acoustic part of this new song. Something wonderfully Mary Lou Lord or Annabelle Lord-Patey is going on here. Our next artist deserves an apology. I bought their fabulous debut I Swear My Love Is True but then neglected to write about it. And that’s a shame because Donaher’s work is some fun pop punk in the best Me First and the Gimme Gimmes or Bowling for Soup tradition. From that album, “Heather” particularly deserves your attention. Their new EP is Angus Soundtrack 2 and contains a super remake of what sounded like a demo on the prior album, “Courtney.” Another band I really grooved on was Purses whose “Wheels on the Run” was on pretty constant repeat throughout 2016. So when I heard band member Drew Beskin had a solo outing coming out, I shifted mode to ‘interest piqued.’ The album is Problematic for the People but only a few singles are available. So far I’m loving “Going Alright for You” with its early 1980s Pat Benatar rhythm guitar slashes and otherworldly synth background. Damn, if this single isn’t alive with 1980s excitement! Keeping this manic feeling alive, Cult Stars from Mars have a new single and it combines everything that makes them a fun hot mess of 1970s pop rawk. I’d almost swear there was spandex and cheap lighters embedded in “Funny Face” somewhere but the cool ‘whew hoo’s temper the excess. It helps that the chords are extra chunky with a side of pumping piano. Cincinnati’s Flying Underground really arrive with their latest single, “Nothing.” All the elements of the band really come together with the songwriting, singing, and performance. I love the guitar effect on the arpeggiated solo at the 17 second mark, one that is repeated throughout the song. It’s striking track with so many cool musical adornments that it oozes should-be hit.

I can’t keep up with Freedom Fry. Seems like every month or so they’ve got another single, EP or new album. They sing in English and French and offer up creative, often dramatic covers of classic songs as well as finely crafted, engaging original material. Their brand new album is L’Invitation, all new songs, all sung in French, and up to their usual high standards. But here I’m going to reach back, all the way to last December for their happy-go-lucky one-off single, “One Big Happy Family.” The duo really excel at this kind folky, endearing sunshine pop, their voices melding effortlessly against a backdrop of spare musical accompaniment. Both versions of the song are worth getting to know. In rise-from-the-ashes news, I was gutted when The Strypes called it quits in 2018. I couldn’t believe that their last album Spitting Image, which I thought was their best, did poorly on the charts. Now three of the four band members have a new outfit named after an old Husker Du record, Zen Arcade, and I have new reasons to be excited. “Don’t Say a Word” takes  the former Strypes fellows into a more punky new wave direction than their previous act. Very Stiff Little Fingers or Mould’s Sugar outfit in terms of musical demeanor. Right now there’s only two singles but what a launch! These guys are definitely going places. Another band I hated to see go was Crowded House. Thankfully, they keep coming back around. Dreamers are Waiting is the band’s first record in 11 years and it gives fans just what they want: midtempo lush melodies and gorgeous harmonies. Many highlights here but I’m digging “Start of Something” for its hewing to the classic Crowded House sound. A band that never really goes away is They Might Be Giants (and that is a very good thing). Their new song is “I Broke My Own Rule” and it is an intricately developed piece of pop songcraft. I don’t know how these guys manage to be so productive, to constantly move in new directions while still sounding oh so TMBG. This is what you get when you apply genius to poprock songwriting and performance. In a more pop punk vein, Indiana’s The Putz prove that Buddy Holly is alive and well and lurking inside their new album, Rise and Shine. It’s all over the last track on the record, “All the Time in the World.” At first I thought this might be some Bond cover tune but the drumming and guitar alerted me that this would be a not-so-pure but still great Lubbock, Texas-inspired event.

Crowded House – Start of Something
They Might Be Giants – I Broke My Own Rule

Jenny’s Justin Mauer has many different outlets for his creativity and he’s using most of them in his autobiographical comedy play Falling on Deaf Eyes. One of his bands appearing on the soundtrack is Suspect Parts and they have a groovy song in “Alright With Me.” The guitar riff and vocals are so mid-1960s fed through a 1980s indie filter, with just a hint of a punk rock Tommy James. The guitar and organ work here is perfection. Looking for a crazy band origin story? Stephen’s Ruin have got it. Original band arrives mid-1980s to some notoriety and success. Now the son of one of the founders restarts the band with a new crew and some pretty amazing 1960s-meets-1980s tunes. The band’s recent double A-sided single “Runaround”/“Tonight” is a pure retro beat rock and roll delight. The former is a frenetic garage-y melodic rock romp, with spot on new wave call and response background vocals. The latter lulls you with its sweet rumbly guitar licks and pristine harmony vocals. I want a whole album of this! Another act mining the past for good measure are Steve Stoeckel (from The Spongetones) and Irene Peña on their one-off single, “Why.” This one hits me right in the musical solar plexus, immediately calling up all those beautiful folk rock duets from 1960s, from Ian and Sylvia to more recent efforts by Don Dixon and Marti Jones. The song is so 1965 and Steve and Irene’s vocals blend perfectly. Really, a lovely piece of work that will have you hitting ‘replay’ again and again. Now if you’re looking for something that screams subtle summer movie blockbuster theme song, Tim Jackson is your man. His new single “How Do You Mend a Broken Heart” has the confident pop stylings of a great Hall and Oates or Crowded House single. It’s pretty straightforward keyboards and vocals but the simplicity masks a clever complexity in the melody. This one is an earworm that works its magic in a sneaky ‘I’ll just listen to this one more time’ sort of way. From his soon-to-be-released second album Litter in the Park. Rounding out our pool of twenty artists is the prolific Richard X. Heyman from his recent album Copious Notes. 70 year old Heyman has been rocking since the 1960s and solo album 14 shows no decline in his songwriting and performance standards. “Tell Me When” literally springs out of the speakers with head turning piano trills and impressive vocal gymnastics. And it’s just a damn good song. Another stand out from the album is the moving love song “Ransom.” The achingly beautiful melody is given depth via Heyman’s incredible vocal and baroque keyboard/strings instrumental backing.

Richard X. Heyman – Tell Me When
Richard X. Heyman – Ransom

Summer’s not going to organize itself. Thankfully your beach tuneage is squared away. With 40 solid poprock artists to choose from your seasonal mixtape this year will be brimming with hooks and jangle.

Almost summer singles mixtape I

23 Wednesday Jun 2021

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Poprock Themepark

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Answering Machine, B.U.D., Bombardier Jones, Daily Worker, Electric Looking Glass, Goodman, Jeremy Porter and the Tucos, Laura Stephenson, Mattiel, Ramirez Exposure, Robert Sherwood, Rooftop Screamers, Ten Tonnes, The Floor Models, The Forty Nineteens, The Rose Petals, The Shambles, The Uptights, Weezer, Your Academy

It’s so close you can almost taste the vodka cocktails. Summer! And that means music to accompany those warm breezes, surf and sand, and lazy, hazy days of scorching heat. To that end, let me present an almost summer bevy of selections for your mixtape, uh, I mean, playlist. In this first of two installments, we offer up 20 suggestions for high rotation seasonal singles.

Let’s get started with my hometown, Vancouver, and some nice ringing guitar from The Uptights on “The Pulse.” The song is from the longplayer Back Again, which came out right near the end of 2020. I love the organ that really comes to fore as the song progresses. 4000 kilometres away (but still in Canada!) Waterloo’s B.U.D. rises from the ashes of Goldfinch in a new solo project from Omar Elkhatib. There’s not much not to like here. Crunchy guitars, punchy synths, and a solid swinging hook anchors “What’s the Point of This (If I’m Not Into It).” A promised follow up EP has yet to materialize but a few more singles have arrived, like the rollicking fun “Popstar Rock N’ Roll.” Ok, enough Canadian content (for now), we’re off the NYC and a bit of a boundary tester for this blog from Laura Stephenson. “After Those Who Mean It” is just a heart-wrenching acoustic number from an artist who normally rocks it up a bit more. There’s something searing and so melancholy about this performance. I can be such a sucker for a good sad song. In Memphis, Your Academy offer a pick-me-up with “Starlight,” a great guitar poprock tune with a slight country feel, from their recent self-titled debut. Now I say ‘debut’ but the band are all veterans of the local music scene and it shows all over this tight record. Brooklyn’s Answering Machine also have a debut album out (well, actually, it’s been out for a year …). Verdict? Bad Luck is more of the eerie melodic rock goodness that appeared on previous EPs and stand-alone singles. For me, the stand out song here is “Marie.” The lead vocal has the soulful country ache of Neko Case cast against a driving lead guitar hook and surging rock and roll beat. It would be a killer cut live in concert, no doubt.

Now, generally speaking, I’m not a live album guy. But when I saw the cover of The Shambles Live at the Casbah with its obvious nods to The Beatles Second Album (Long Tall Sally in Canada) I thought it warranted a needle drop. The opening cut was the band grinding through their first single from 1993, “(She’s Used to Playing With) Fire,” and from the opening rhythm guitar I was hooked. The performance is anything but a shambles: loose yet solid, exciting, with great harmony vocals. The album was assembled from various shows at this location early in the new millennium and it showcases the band’s strong material and serious live chops. Another California band effectively working the retro rock and roll scene are The Forty Nineteens. Their new album The New Roaring Twenties vibes those classic 1960s rock and roll outfits (e.g. Rolling Stones, CCR) while still giving off a bit of 1980s indie (a la The Replacements), depending on which track you pick. I was torn about whether to choose the rockin’ Joe Walsh-ed vocal on “I’m Always Questioning Days” or the more melodic package that is “It’s the Worst Thing I Could Do.” I went with the latter, with its pumping piano and judicious use of jangle guitar. Throwback Suburbia’s drummer had an interesting idea. Write some songs and then ask a gang of different artists to sing on different tracks for a new band, Rooftop Screamers, and a new album, Next Level. It’s a project idea that can easily lose its focus but Mike Collins makes it work, largely because the songwriting is so consistently good. Case in point: “Buckle Up,” featuring Jellyfish vocalist Tim Smith. The song has the sleek pop aura of a top rank Crowded House single. I fell hard for the ear candy that was Ten Tonnes “Better Than Me” from his 2018 self-titled debut. Recently he reignited that spark with the glammish “Girl Are You Lonely Like Me?” with its shuffle beat and emotional vocal, kinda like The Vaccines or Haircut 100 in therapy. The kid’s got swing and killer sing-along background vocals. For those of us who can’t get enough of the Bryds, a very special record is due out soon from an exquisite jangle-friendly band, The Floor Models. You can get a taste of their fab back catalogue from the 2013 retrospective Floor Your Love but here I want you to enjoy their indie-fied version of “Lady Friend,” a teaser from their soon-to-be-released album, In Flyte Entertainment: A Tribute to the Byrds.

The Floor Models – Lady Friend

Jeremy Porter and the Tucos’ “Dead Ringer” is straight ahead melodic Americana, reminding me of the more upbeat moments on that first Peter Case solo album back in 1986, particularly vocally. I love the synth snippet that kicks in at 3:10 in the final few moments of the solo. It’s featured on their new longplayer, Candy Coated Cannonball, and it’s just one of many highlights. Given that Ramirez Exposure’s latest album is named after an environmental newsletter that advocated the end of humanity as a solution to environmental crisis, the contents are surprisingly chirpy. Opening track “Bridges and Roads” is light and sunny, but it is the title track “Exit Times” that really grabbed my attention with its cool electric guitar arpeggiations and dreamy vocals. Sometimes I imagine NYC as just teeming with bedrooms for making pop music. Like the work from Goodman. I’ve featured this talented, almost totally one-man-band before and every new release reveals new depths and influences. On his new record Goodman Versus the Nostalgia Machine he is like Ray Davies reborn, piling up catchy tunes with clever commentary. “Bitter. Alone. Again” shimmers with sneaky, subtle hooks and vocals that add emotional colour and depth. From the mean streets of Baltimore Bombardier Jones offers us the cool vocal delivery of a Steve Miller. “Great Ideas” from Dare To Hope is just a straight up AM radio goodtime single, circa 1975. Love the spare piano solo to bursts on the scene two thirds in. Cotton Mather guitarist Harold Whit Williams has a side project that might conjure up the ‘s’ word for any remaining red diaper babies out there. It’s called Daily Worker. Now you don’t have to be a card carrying anything to enjoy what he’s doing here. I mean, check out the shuffling strut behind “I Got Hypnotized” with its creative mix of acoustic guitar rhythm, sixties organ, and tasty lead guitar. The rest of Hometown Hero is a winner too, with a Harrisonian soft rock flair competing with a Plimsoulsian new wave vibe.

You’d swear contemporary LA band Electric Looking Glass were giving it to you straight from 1968 Haight Ashbury in San Francisco. It’s not like they’re hiding their influences with an album title like Somewhere Flowers Grow. But it really is there in the music too. Opening cut “Purple, Red, Green, Blue and Yellow” kicks off with a solid blast of psychedelic pop guitar before opening up into a great bit of Turtles/Jefferson Airplane hippie poprock. Moving back to the future, there is something so cool about the brooding New Order-ish riff kicking off and driving Mattiel’s recent single, “Those Words.” I really enjoyed the rough-hewn rock and roll sound of the band’s last effort Satis Faction and this new song suggests there more where that came from. The band’s vocalist/songwriter Mattiel Brown really delivers on both here, with a striking performance and timely lyrics. Some bands like a real challenge, like writing a song about American President Warren G. Harding. Who, you might ask? He’s no Washington, Lincoln, Roosevelt, or Kennedy but The Rose Petals manage to turn out a western style performance a la True West or Rank and File all about Harding’s many foibles. It’s the opening track on the band’s engaging debut LP American Grenadine. Now for a complete change of mood, there’s Robert Sherwood. On Mr. Sherwood he showcases a bevy of light pop sketches that remind me Roddy Frame’s Aztec Camera. Sherwood does wonders with interesting vocal harmonies and spare but intriguing lead guitar work. On “Blue All Over” and the rest of this highly listenable record there’s more than a hint of a genius song arranger bearing similarities to Richard X. Heyman or the Eels’ Mark Everett. Ok, big finish time and what better band to close things out by taking us over the top than Weezer? Seems like an army of haters are out there just waiting for Rivers and Co. to stumble but the band just keeps on delivering the goods. The playful Van Weezer is no exception. “The End of the Game” cleverly rides the edge of rawk bombast with love while delivering the band’s signature knock-out hooks. And there’s more to love here – my blog writing friends can’t agree on what track they love the best.

The pent up energy for a perfect summer this year is swelling all out of control. People are desperate for fun. Here at Poprock Record we take our public service role seriously. So relax, we’ve got your music sorted. And even more is on the way with part II, coming soon.

Double Dutch: Want Want and Fokko

18 Friday Jun 2021

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Artist Spotlight

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Dutch rock, Fokko, Fokko Mellema, Want Want

Those Brits really know how to throw historical shade, cooking up a host of put downs for their Dutch political and economic rivals in the 17th century that are still in use today. But the time is long overdue to reclaim these expressions and use them in more positive ways. Here ‘double Dutch’ just means doubling up on some exciting power pop groups from the Netherlands. Now our two bands – Want Want and Fokko – are actually the creation of a single creative force, songwriter Fokko Mellema. And their earliest and most recent releases sound remarkably similar, bearing the unmistakable influence of Weezer and Fountains of Wayne. I mean, Want Want’s debut album Mijn Meisje Vindt Me Leuk Zoals Ik Ben even includes a pretty fab Dutch language cover of FOW’s “Sink to the Bottom.” But in between there are some interesting stylistic detours in the transition from one band to another. But, in the end, everything usually comes back to crashing guitars, sweet harmonies, and irresistible melodic hooks.

Kip Paard Koe (Sink to the Bottom)

Want Want hit the record scene in 2010 with Mijn Meisje Vindt Me Leuk Zoals Ik Ben, which roughly translates as My Girl Likes Me the Way I Am. Unlike a number of European acts trying to make it in the music business, Want Want do not sing in English but in Dutch. Ok, I have little idea just what they are singing about but with tunes this catchy, who really cares? What comes through is the sense of freewheeling fun on title track “Mijn Meisje Vindt Me Leuk Zoals Ik Ben,” “Klaasjan” and “Stuff Scoren” (Scoring Stuff). These songs remind me a lot of another great Dutch band, Sunday Sun. There’s even a bit of the irrepressible positivity of Linus of Hollywood on tracks like “Denk Er Niet Meer Aan” (Don’t Think About It Anymore). Things go a bit more indie with “Kip Paard Doe,” the band’s Dutch-ified cover of Fountains of Wayne’s “Sink to the Bottom,” and “Heleen” with its hints of Oasis in the verses. Other songs harken back to more 1960s influences, like “Klote” (Shit) and Beatle-ish “Niet Aardig Meer” (Not Nice More). Then there’s the sonically interesting juxtaposition of organ and guitar on “Hoog” (High) and lovely Big Star-like guitar palate on “Sanne.” 2012 saw the release of the band’s follow up EP Neit Huilen (Do Not Cry) which featured an even more concentrated dose of hooks, like the monster should-be hit single “Angelique,” with its addictive chorus and some tasty lead guitar work, and the relentlessly chirpy “Ik Denk Aan Jou” (I Think of You).

Mijn Mesje Vindt Me Leuk Zoals Ik Ben (My Girl Likes Me the Way I Am)
Ik Denk Aan Jou (I Think of You)

Yet despite some positive notices, Mellama shut down the band in favour of playing some solo living room gigs post 2012. Exactly when this all turned into Fokko is a bit unclear. Three EPs appear under the band name over 2014-15 period, the sound decidedly more acoustic and playful, a little less frenetically power pop. “Anna” is carried by a boppy acoustic guitar, “Ahoe” adds piano and some darker melodic shading, “Tijdbom” (Timebomb) puts a pretty cool violin into the mix, while “Eeuwig en Altijd” (Eternal and Always) dramatically scales things down to a lovely delicate juxtaposition of voice and instruments, reminding me of Farrah in their more mellow moments. Things pick up tempo-wise by the third EP with the gently raucus “Ruzie Op De Radio” (Quarrel on the Radio) and the very FOW “Hoofdpijn” (Headache). But the EP ends with the restrained “Tot Je Van Me Houdt” (Till You Love Me), another lovely acoustic guitar number delivered with the quiet, intimate confidence a la Elliott Smith.

Hoofdpijn (Headache)

2019 saw the band back with a big, big power pop sound on the full album release, Stadaarnietzodoeiets. This time, the return of crashing guitars and a more manic pacing was accompanied by a bit more menace than Want Want’s take on the genre. “Goeroe” (Guru) combines big guitar crunch with guest talk-vocals and a smooth hooky chorus. “Hose,” “Kim,” and “Plekje in De Zon” (A Place in the Sun) all balance melody with some killer lead guitar work. “Met Een Biertje Op De Bank” (With a Beer on the Couch) is a rollicking retro romp while “Is Het Nog Steeds Vandaag” (Is It Still Today) has some very Matthew Sweet adornments. The whole record is like one long surge of adrenaline, offering up 14 songs in just 35 minutes! Since then more stand-alone singles have emerged (“Ktll” and “Alles Gaat Kapot En Ik Trek Het Niet Meer”) that confirm a continuing focus on the power side of poprock.

Plekje in De Zon (A Place in the Sun)
Is Het Nog Steeds Vandaag (Is It Still Today)
Alles Gaat Kapot En Ik Trek Het Niet Meer (Everything is Going to Break and I Can’t Take It Anymore)

Those Brits, they don’t know what they’re missing with all their Dutch hating. This double scoop of melodic rock and roll from the Netherlands is proof positive that great art transcends borders, language and historic animosities. Want Want and Fokko’s recorded output is readily available at all the usual e-music outlets – get yours there or from the source.

(My thanks to Ron Bormans for introducing me to this band!)

High octane hit-makers: The Cudas, Killer Crush, The James Clark Institute and Love, Burns

14 Monday Jun 2021

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Poprock Themepark

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Killer Crush, Love Burns, The Cudas, The James Clark Institute

Some acts really know how to hit the exhilaration pedal in their music. The songs just beg for movement, preferably pogoing in a friendly mosh-like environment. Today’s performers offer up a bevy of sizzling song excitement on their albums, EPs, and double A-sided singles.

I’ve been totally grooving on The Cudas’ early singles with their Ramones-meet-Cheap Trick retro vibe. But the band’s new extended play release Alien Vacation shows they are so much more. Sure, those early influences are still there, particularly on the Tommy and Rockets-ish opening track, “Autorama.” And yet there is something else, some decidely inventive melodic hooks and a great Fountains of Wayne synth solo. “I Don’t Want to Go Out” has a darker edge, reminding me of Rooney or The Cars at times. “My Summer Song” has the songwriting mark of a Adam Schlesinger or Rivers Cuomo. “Space Coast” goes a long way on its distinctive opening groove, only to explode melodically in the chorus. It would appear that The Cudas’ creative force Reinhard Leon van Biljon is slowly working us up to a full album release. If this EP is a snapshot I can’t wait to get the big picture.

Hard to get many details on Killer Crush. Apparently transatlantic friends for two decades, they decided to join forces for the first time on this self-titled debut project. The result is a mix of songs rooted in an acoustic guitar laden attack, straight up post-pub rock, or the melodic indie scene. “Wait” sounds like two jumbo Martins layered with some sweet harmony vocals. Or there’s a slight western tinge to the poppy melody carrying “The City.” The boys break out the electric guitars for “Street Lights” and “French Kiss” but not at the expense of the melodic hooks. “Plain and Simple” clips along with the feel of any early solo Nick Lowe deep cut while “My Love is Gone” vibes a more Rockpile/Dave Edmunds sound. “Maria” updates things to a more nineties indie pop theme. “Love Song” is the obvious single, with distinctive ‘ah ah’s and ‘who hoo hoo hoo’s. All in all, this is a killer debut, packed full of strong songwriting and subtle production choices. Definitely worthy of repeat listens.

Ok, you could be forgiven for mistaking the opening few bars of The James Clark Institute’s new album The Colour of Happy for something from Imperial Bedroom. The dynamic combination of organ and piano is clearly a brief homage. But quickly “Little Powder Keg” turns a hooky melodic corner seldom so openly embraced by EC himself. Instrumentally, the song is brilliant, riffing some jangle, The Who, and a host of other influences but with subtle restraint. And that quality is what you’ll come to expect all over this record. The songs are more than your usual poprock fare, embracing an ambitious songwriting tradition associated with Graham Parker, Joe Jackson and early John Hiatt. I mean, just give “Selfish Portrait” a listen and tell me JCI has not nailed the Aimee Mann/Michael Penn school of haunting-yet-still-jaunty tune-smithing. At other moments, tracks like “Blue in the Room” are just toe-tapping good hummers, in this instance with a very Ian Gomm delivery. Or there’s the killer jangle/organ combo driving “Better Than I Remember.” Other highlight here for me include “Should I Tell Her” and “Next Best Thing.” But this album is all good, a bevy of melodic delights, resting on some obviously strong influences but never just colouring within the lines.

With Love, Burns Phil Sutton of the Pale Lights charges out of the gate with a new project that is blistering in its intensity, anger, and damn good melodies. Both tracks on this double A-sided single are a knock out. “Wired Eyes” is like the Byrds pitched just a bit faster than you might expect, with a jangle run that will set your heart racing and lyrics that will move you to action. “Hard to Fall” has a guitar/organ interplay that also tugs on something deep inside, again, with a strong Bryds or International Submarine Band feel. The guitar solo here is also something special, such a perfect distillation of the song’s melody. This is what hit radio should sound like all the time.

There’s a spark in some music that just makes people want to move. Today’s high octane hit makers pull out all the stops to get you going, somewhere. So why not give them a visit? You can find The Cudas, Killer Crush, The James Clark Institute, and Love, Burns at their hyperlinked internet real estate.

Merseybeat time! The Chickenbackers and The Tummies

07 Monday Jun 2021

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Artist Spotlight

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The Chickenbackers, The Tummies

Regular readers know I’m a sucker for anything Mersey-fied. Those magic years covering 1963 through 1965 were a distinctive period for the moptops, one that spread to other bands and whole northwestern region of England. And the influence lives in both serious (e.g. Utopia’s Deface the Music) and parodic forms (e.g. The Rutles’ All You Need is Cash). Today’s feature acts revive the Mersey spirit with some dynamite new material and strong performances.

Madrid, Spain’s The Chickenbackers add a distinctive Shadowy Men on a Shadowy Planet vibe to their otherwise Mersey-full debut LP Yeah Right, Yeah! You can really hear the synthesis on the opening track “Because I was Blind.” In fact, in addition to their spot-on Mersey sound, the band ace a broader mid-1960s garage and early Who feel as well, particularly on “C’mon C’mon” and their cover of the High Numbers “Zoot Suit” (obviously). Of course, the main event is the With the Beatles through Beatles for Sale aura surrounding so much of what appears here, like the sha-la-la perfect “By Your Side” and the jangle-heavy “Hipsterboy.” The record also includes some inspired covers, like the Count Five’s “Can’t Get Your Loving” and the Dixie Cups’ “I’m Gonna Get You Yet.” The band also crank out an explosively propulsive instrumental on “The Surfer Chicken.” Basically, this disc has got a song for every mood shift at your retro dance party. So get your Chelsea boots off the shelf and get ready for Yeah Right, Yeah!, an album that offers something old and something new in a very enjoyable package (with CDs available from Kool Kat here).

The river Mersey runs through Nashville, Tennesse, if the exertions of The Tummies are anything to go by. That unfailing “I Saw Her Standing There” beat is all over “Sweet Little Mistreater” and “Little Blue Heart,” the opening cuts of their 2020 album 9:30 Girl. Title track “9:30 Girl” evokes the more acoustic ballads on those early Beatles records but “Money From the Hill” advances the influences to the acoustic guitar folkie fingerpicking-style that appeared on the White Album. Meanwhile “Stuff Like That” moves into Rubber Soul/Revolver territory while “Under the Covers” gives voice to Beatles’ Buck Owens-inspired take on American country and western. The mix of male and female vocals takes us out of the Beatles sound a bit on songs like “Do My Eyes Deceive Me” but the songwriting style is pure vintage Mersey in the Gerry and the Pacemakers register. And not all songs here live solely in the Beatles universe. “Collector” reminds me of mid-1970s Canadian melodic rock from the likes of Chilliwack. I have to say, when I read the band bios and their links to seventies rock goths like Kiss I wasn’t sure what to expect. But The Tummies deliver applying solid Beatles chops to some pretty engaging songs.

Working the Mersey strip is a fine balance for any band. You’ve got to offer up the recognizable beat group motifs to draw the fans but deliver engaging and creative material to keep their attention beyond a novelty interest. The Chickenbackers and The Tummies deliver the goods and then some.

Breaking news: The Reds, Pinks & Purples, Fishboy, Lo Talker, and Kevin Devine

02 Wednesday Jun 2021

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Breaking News

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Fishboy, Kevin Devine, Lo Talker, The Reds Pinks & Purples

Today’s breaking news is a bit off the poprock beaten track. All the artists have something somewhat mysterious and unique going on. They want your attention but they’re gonna get it on their own terms.

Kayleigh Watson from UK indie music site The Line of Best Fit had the best description of San Francisco’s The Reds, Pinks & Purples: ‘depresso pop’. On Uncommon Weather, the band’s first long-player, these guys are so down they make Morrissey look up to me. Seriously, the style is a lofi, almost shoegazey take on The Smiths, though without being derivative. Not that this record is a total downer or anything. In fact, opening track “Don’t Ever Pray in the Church in my Street” has a great bouncy lead guitar line, almost drone-like, that could certainly get the dance floor bopping. At the other times, the band channels other indie lowkey jangle outfits like The Catherines on songs like “I Hope I Never Fall in Love.” Of course, song titles like “A Kick in the Face (That’s Life)” and “The Biggest Fan” certainly give the Mopester a run for his money. Meanwhile “The Record Player and the Damage Done” is a deceptively jaunty journey into vinyl ennui. Overall, this record is a state of mind, a mood. If you’re a bit out of sorts, feeling out of phase, Uncommon Weather will soothe your troubled mind. Turn it on and let the reverb take you away.

Hailing from Denton, Texas, population just 150,000, Fishboy sound instead like a sophisticated big city concept outfit, with recordings that vibe a pretty hip off-Broadway musical style. Exhibit A: their brand new concept album, the mock-holiday dedicated Waitsgiving. You could be forgiven for thinking that this album is some brilliant mediation on our current pandemic situation but actually the whole thing is just an unrelated flash of brilliance, another installment of the band’s bent for ‘intricately plotted’ story albums. Now there’s a story threaded through these songs here but there’s also just great songs. So listen to the whole thing for a fun show or just tune in to specific songs for some hooky tunes. Personally I love opening track “The First Waitsgiving (Waitsgiving Founder)” with its show tune feel and melodic hints of Fun and Weezer layered in here and there. Or early video “Greatness Waitress” charges along with a staccato tempo that is all caged melodic energy. And then there’s the alternative universe hit single, “The Last Waitsgiving,” a song that pays repeated listening to firmly get under your skin. Looking for something a bit more ambitious than just a collection of hummable songs? Fishboy have your album right here.

Athens Georgia’s Lo Talker have been described as folk rock and psychedelic but the harmonies and dreamy guitars remind me more of bands like Fleet Foxes and Blitzen Trapper (in acoustic mode). The band’s debut album A Comedy of Errors has a sparse but lush attack, the overall sound tends to sneak in place, adding sonic layers and unusual elements but never crowding the songs. The formula is all there on opening track “Heaven in Drag,” a musical mélange sealed with an alluringly emotive vocal. Sometimes the sound is very poppy folk, as on “Nero in the News,” but at other times it’s just a lovely swirl of different melodic hues, a bit of keyboard, some driving acoustic guitar, as captured on “Astral Humming.”  There are a few departures, like the upbeat pop swing animating “No Champagne” or even the hooky 1970s AM radio throwback style on “Automatic Love.” For a new band on their debut record, the result is strikingly coherent and established, like something they’ve been crafting for years.

I love Kevin Devine and I don’t care who knows it. I’d heard a few of the solo tunes over the years (“Bubblegum”; “She Can See Me”), I had those great Bad Books records, but it was his 2016 release Instigator was the revelation for me. I fell hard for his biting socio-political analysis and the tunes. Oh, those tunes! I was fortunate to see him play the album solo in a small club in Toronto and the performance was pure magic. Recalling his live rendering “I Was Alive Back Then” still gives me shivers. So news that Devine was hard at work on a new album got my attention. He’s been showcasing new material over this past year as he works out just how to present them and even released a few demo versions and some inspired covers to tide us over until the new record comes. You can hear them all on the very satisfying full-LP length Out in the Ether, split between five new songs and five covers. The covers are delightfully inspired reworkings of songs from indie darlings (Elliott Smith, The Strokes) and big name acts (Bruce Springsteen, Sam Cooke). But the main event here is clearly the new songs – and they’re sounding pretty damn good. “Go Haunt Someone Else” is a classic Devine pretty little tune, with nice background vocals. It works as an acoustic number but it will be interesting to hear if he expands the sonic palate on this one. On the whole the originals are wistful and longing in execution though “You’re My Incentive” hints at something that could be taken up in a more dramatic fashion, if that’s what Devine has in mind. So, overall impression: promising stuff from a guy who never disappoints.

I can’t get enough of classic poprock AM radio hits but I’m also partial to acts who bend the formula a bit, who press at the edges of convention, who push the audience to hear the familiar in a different way. The Reds, Pinks & Purples, Fishboy, Lo Talker, and Kevin Devine all defy the easy and obvious paths in songwriting and performance. Reward them with your attention.

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