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With autumn just around the corner it’s time to twist that radio dial for new music. Luckily there’s plenty of fab new releases to tune into.

In many ways The Summertimes self-titled debut LP has been the album of the summer. Reviewed positively everywhere, this is a record spilling over with good-time rock and roll tunes taking us back to that heyday of Ozzie indie chart magic you might associate with acts like the Hoodoo Gurus. It’s there in the loose party vibe of the opening cut and early release single “Inside” or the vocal snarl and rollicking hooks on “Password.” Then “White Pointer” is something a bit different, with a Lou Reed vocal directness amid carefully placed but somehow insistent guitar riffs. Things go jangle good on “Love (It’s the Word)” with its relentless lead guitar lines while “Athens, GA” is more REM, not surprisingly. But the album’s rocking flavour is tempered by lighter moments too: a Paul Kelly feel to “When the Lights Hit the Square,” some Crowded House style in  “Sky and the Sea,” and a hint of Teenage Fanclub lingering on “Wakes Up Shadows.” My favourite cut? Undoubtedly “My Beautiful Girl Harbour” with its faint echoes of Modern English’s “I Melt With You” in places. And don’t miss album closer, “The Perfect Wave.” Rarely can a band combine elements of the Yardbirds, the Monkees, and classic surf motifs and still come up with something new. The Summertimes is not just for summer, it’s one of this year’s must-have albums.

The return of legendary Vancouver band Odds is definitely an event worth marking with cake and fireworks. Central to the celebration – Crash the Time Machine, the third full album release from the band since they reunited with a new line-up in the early aughts. What we have here is more of that west coast cool sound Odds is known for. Opening cut and title track “Crash the Time Machine” assembles all the right poppy rock components. This song says ‘I’m the hit’ for sure. Runner-up should-be single would be “My Mind’s On Other Things” with its alluring guitar lead lines and captivating harmony vocals. Then there’s “Walk Among the Stars,” a track embodying a pop ennui that is unmistakeably Odds. The FM radio deep cuts would be “Staring at a Blank Page,” “Fairytale of Heaven,” or “Fall Guy,” the latter replete with secret agent guitar and more psychedelic chorus. For sonic departures, check out the more dire sound sketches featured in “The Traveling Light” or “Winning Is Everything,” the last a light ditty about how getting what you want may not be what you need. Personally, I’m loving the ELO-tinged “Revolution Singing” as well as the soulful album closer “Somehow in a Dream.” Listening to Crash the Time Machine a few times it’s clear, this is a band that knows its own playbook. But they still know how to throw a curve. Welcome back Odds, you’ve been missed.

I don’t know what I was thinking. Somewhere I picked up a copy of Ratboys 2020 album Printer’s Devil but I never wrote about it. I did review their poppy single “Down the River” but somehow that doesn’t cut it. Redemption time now that their brand new LP The Window is out. As a band that usually straddles folk pop and indie rock, opening cut “Making Noise for the Ones You Love” is a noisy, celebratory, yet fun outlier. “Morning Zoo” puts us right back into the melodic pop swing that band so aces. Very Weepies on caffeine. Should be the hit single. From there the album moves in multiple directions but without losing its thematic centre. “Crossed That Line” chugs along with a rocking inflection. This is where comparisons to Kississippi and Soccer Mommy come in. “It’s Alive” kicks off with a dramatic sonic build-out that has a particular grandeur. Vocally I hear Tristan but with a rocking backing band. Meanwhile the bending lead guitar tone is just exquisite. Another possible single is title track “The Window” with its subtle guitar hooks. For variety, “Black Earth, WI” sounds country-ish, almost Rilo Kiley in its alt-indie temperament while the folk side of the band covered with “Bad Reaction.” My deep cut fave is “Empty.” I love the perky drive and winning melody of this song. It’s got a Grouplove loose tightness.

A Cut Worms recording is often a snapshot of a particular corner of the history of popular music. Late 1960s folkie pop on Hollow Ground, more 1970s country rock on his 2020 single “Unnatural Disaster,” and so on. Now on the new self-titled Cut Worms I’m hearing that crafted pop sound I associate with the mid-1970s, with a few notable exceptions. From the first tantalizing spate of piano notes of opening cut “Don’t Fade Out” there’s a Captain and Tennille or Neil Sedaka or Gilbert O’Sullivan breezy swing in play. “Take It and Smile” has a more seventies singer/songwriter feel. “Living Inside” also has that intimate seventies pop feel. But just as you’re settling in “I’ll Never Make It” harkens back to a Patsy Cline ballad in more rockabilly days or “Is It Magic” utilizes a 1950s sparsely-arranged harmony group style. “Let’s Go Out on the Town” moves back into the sixties with its Cyrkle or The Young Veins vibe. “Too Bad” finishes the record with another strong nod to 1970s confessional pop, particularly the electric piano.

It’s a real mix of tune-age on this radio relay race. Click on the hot links to get more of the good same.

Photo courtesy Thomas Hawk Flikr collection.