David Bash returned to Toronto recently to close out this season of his traveling live music roadshow, the International Pop Overthrow musical festival. It was the last stop on a set of 10 dates that had him jetting from Liverpool and Copenhagen to Los Angeles and New York City. The Toronto dates offered four shows over three days featuring 20 local-ish acts, all playing at The Painted Lady live music venue. And Poprock Record was there to provide a snapshot of what you missed.
Things kicked off with a solo set from Dublin’s Barry O’Brien, leader of Slumberjet. So IPO Toronto was not all Canadian content. Fans of XTC and Pugwash won’t go wrong with O’Brien’s brand of melodic tunes. Then local boys The James Clark Institute featured a few tunes from their new album Under the Lampshade from a paired down version of the group. The results were more acoustic Mersey than the finished product but no less delightful. When The Nines took the stage it was like some joyous reunion concert. The audience seemed primed for every tune and if the band had been parted for some time you’d never know it. Another band that made the most of just having two members in attendance was Telejet. They cranked through a half dozen tracks from this year’s Spiritual Age record and the effect was magic. That album is a load of great tunes. Night #1 of IPO ended with an actual reunion of Halifax legends Cool Blue Halo. Chatting with the band’s former manager, the story he told me was so textbook: band on the brink of success breaks up. Still, this night they played tunes from their 1996 debut Kangaroo and you’d swear they were today’s latest new thing.
Slumberjet – Why Do You
Day #2 of IPO Toronto opened with the inimitable Blair Packham. Man, can this guy weave a tale. His songs are hooky and touching and Packham can hold an audience in a spell like few performers can. “One Hit Wonder” is a brilliantly-staged story-song with a chorus that will have you singing along. Moving Clockwise, this band have been around for decades but their performance here seemed to distil their sound to its sixties British invasion roots. On record, I love the over-sized pop charm of “Lift a Finger” from their 2000 release Accidentally on Purpose. By contrast, Carmen Toth conjured up the no-nonsense, new wavey rock and roll bounce of early Pat Benatar or Chrissie Hynde. “Pretty Dresses” is a clever rumination balancing feminist critique with individual desire. But you could dip in anywhere on her recent LP Fix the World for equally good results. Hands down the rocking-est moment of IPO Toronto happened when The Wasagas took the stage. With matching t-shirts and guitars, the band blasted through a series of way-cool, seriously dance-able instrumental surf numbers. Windows fogged? Check. Day #3 was an afternoon, all-ages event. Standard Electric definitely offered up some family fun, complete with stickers and buttons. Don’t worry if you missed the party, you can hear on the band’s 2020 album Overnight Lows and Afternoon Highs.
Clockwise – Lift a Finger
David Bash operates with a big tent approach to the power pop genre, big enough to encompass jangle, roots, surf, singer-songwriter, art rock, retro and indie. If you were there at IPO Toronto you got to savor them all. But if you missed it, click on the hyperlinks above to get a taste of what was some great IPO action.
Nothing makes Thursday sparkle like a bit a jangle. Today’s selection offers up full albums and stand-alone singles to sate your reverb-craving appetite.
Former members of The Dentists, The Discords, and a host of other bands make up the membership of The Treasures of Mexico. Burn the Jets is their album number 3 and it’s a solid collection of tunes, awash in predictably sibilant guitar sounds. Opening cut “Beaming” practically sounds like a rainy day in by the fire, so suggestive is its aural atmosphere. “Monday Morning” is another strong contender for should-be hit single. On album #4 Glaswegian guitar pop band U.S. Highball clearly know how to stock an album full of melodic twists and turns. As previously noted in our preview of the record last summer, No Thievery, Just Cool has some strong singles contenders with “Irresponsible Holiday” and “Paris 2019.” But why stop there? The record is a veritable sea of highlights, with nifty offerings like “Picnic at Doughnut Groyne” and “Out of Time.” And how did I miss the link with the band name and American experimental musician Harry Partch’s magnum opus? Not sure why the band landed on that influence but an interesting connection nevertheless.
Now we move on the singles portion of our jangle programming. You might want to be sitting down for this next one. Japanese band Memory Girls have assembled a killer jangle roll out for their single “Our Freedom, Our Darkness.” As the song is sung in Japanese I have no idea how the sombre title connects with the rippling, mesmerizing jangle lead guitar work that drives the tune but, really, who cares? When the music is this good … Toronto’s Ducks Ltd. know how to throw down serious jangle. Their one-off single “The Main Thing” explodes into action and never lets up. The lead guitar workout is unbelievable, buffeted by a dreamy, ethereal vocal. More Canadian content comes from Kitchener, Ontario’s Hynesswith “Weatherman.” The song has a folkie pop flavour, reminding me a bit of April Wine in some of their more jangle moments. Dutch janglers The Maureens have been teasing fans since September with a few new songs. “Rainy Day” speaks to all their strengths: sparkling guitars, effortless harmony vocals, and a subtle earwormy hook buried in the song. A new album from their Utrecht headquarters is highly anticipated.
Closing out this jangle Thursday, Johnny Marr’s new single “Somewhere.” A undeniable master of the genre from his time with The Smiths and as a ‘guitar for hire’ since their breakup, his own solo work has often slipped under the radar. This song, the only new addition to a recent ‘best of’ collection, is just too Johnny jangle good to ignore.
Jangle Thursday is a kind of public service, helping you get to the weekend with your smile intact.
People write me. Really talented people. What can a poor scribe do but write about these great rock and roll bands?
With his band The Muggs Detroit rock and roll mainstay Tony Muggs has delivered 6 albums of distinctive heavy blues rock. But his solo albums have a decidedly different flavour. Under the Dude moniker he released 2012’s Kid Gloves and this year’s Autobiograffitti, the latter coinciding with his book of the same name, and the contents are more solidly pop. The vibe is very Beatles 1966. There’s whimsey, there’s drone, there’s sometimes even a heavy kick lurking beneath the poppy melodies. Having said all that, Kid Gloves’ opening cut “Not Exactly Where I Should Be” actually suggests a Monkees sense of fun. By contrast “Sweet Danielle” matches a more Beatles “I’m Only Sleeping” melancholy pop while “Two Minutes Hate” is more in “Tomorrow Never Knows” or “She Said She Said” vein. Then again “Soliloquy” sounds very Pugwash to me. A decade later the Beatles influences spread from 1966 to 1968 on Autobiograffitti. There’s a more loose, old school rock and roll vibe on tracks like “Ahh Geez Louise” or a touch of Nesmith’s country mode Monkees on “Devil’s In My Whiskey Once Again.” But other tracks like “Red Coat For Sale” are Revolver-era rocking tight. Both “Mary Mary (Quite Controversial)” and “You Are So Wonder” harken back to that “Doctor Robert” or “Paperback Writer” feel. Then the record ends on a more dreamy psychedelic pop note with “Tomorrow Is Promised to No One.”
The Mother Z’s are a brother and sister duo that have the DIY punky immediacy of Jonathan Richman or The Violent Femmes. It’s been almost ten years since they waved goodbye to fans with a variety of acoustic collections and b-sides. Since then brother Andy released a host of work as ARP! while sister Becca exited the music scene. But now they’re back together with a new EP Rest It Straight and the results are less frenetic, more acoustic, but no less engaging than their earlier work. “Non, Merci” launches things with a cool strut, evincing a Replacements kind of rough band togetherness. “Rest It Straight” offers up an alluring swing featuring a Spoon-like rhythm section. “Sheboygan” and “Meredith” have a country rock-folk feel akin to Rank and File while “Holy Smokes!” has the makings of an Americana classic. And don’t miss the tender openness on display within “Postcard from Chicago,” definitely the should-be single.
Collamer Circle represents some double-barrelled Vermont songwriting action from Justin Levinson and Ben Patton. I’ll admit, there were times when I thought I could discern when songs tipped more towards one writer or the other. For instance, having waded through Patton’s 12 fabulous albums, tracks like “Send Some Love My Way” and “Then and There” seemed to exude his distinctive turns of phrase and melody while “Mirabelle” just captured his penchant for old-timey whimsy. But for most of the album I couldn’t tell who wrote what, so aligned are these artists in their melodic MO. Opening cut “Madeline for the Win” is exhibit A, a classic Levinson/Patton cleverly structured pop song, both in tune and lyrics. Altogether I’d say the collaboration has a 1970s AM radio flavour. “California Sun” has a west coast beach sound washed with a bit of yacht rock. I hear something like Leo Sayer’s boppy pop singles on “Baby You’ve Arrived” while “I Need Somebody Now” builds to a brilliant melodic arc in the chorus. Then again, “Lead Me To You” could be seen as a more Beatlesque effort. But the record’s stand-out, should-be hit single is undoubtedly “Tin Foil Hat Parade.” This tune breaks out into more timeless poprock territory, conjuring the feel of any number great songs from Squeeze or Split Enz.
With his new Elephonic project Blow Pops and Lackloves leader Mike Jarvis attempts to distil the very essence of poppy rock and roll. And given a few plays of his new band’s self-titled debut I’d say he’s largely succeeded. Opening cut “Until the Sound” is a cacophony of sounds that still somehow gel together, vibing a load of 1980s English guitar bands. But other points reach farther back, reinventing a Merseyside feel on tracks like “Wonderin’.” I mean “Why Can’t You Listen” almost sounds like a With The Beatles deep cut, the song structure is so early Beatles but wrapped in a more contemporary sound. From there it’s like a tour of different decades, with the various songs accenting different pop music moments. There’s a 1960s Latin horns wash on “Durango,” a sunny early 1970s AM pop sheen to “Freedom Bells,” while “Rapid Transit” exudes a late 1970s penchant for acoustic rock with ominous overtones. And then we have songs that defy easy categorization like “Memphis UK.” This one swings with a “His Latest Flame” shimmy, touched up with some striking guitar flourishes. Really, Elephonic is an obvious ‘best of’ list addition.
Why Can’t You ListenMemphis UK
Hard to believe people this talented have to write and send their own pressers but that’s what being an artist has come to today. Why not put paid to that effort by making it rain across the hyperlinked band sites added above for your convenience.
Photo ‘Mostly It Was Something To Fill Up Her Empty Days’ courtesy Thomas Hawk Flikr collection.
I grew up immersed in popular music. My parents were barely adults themselves when they had me and my other brother and their enthusiasm for the 1960s music scene they were living through was palpable. If the TV was off the record player was on. Between them my parents covered a pretty wide swathe of the popular music scene. Dad was everything from Elvis, Jerry Lee Lewis and Chuck Berry right through to Jimi Hendrix and Creedence Clearwater Revival. Mother filled in more of the pop content with Buddy Holly, Brenda Lee, and Gene Pitney as well as country like Patsy Cline and folk from Pete Seeger. And they both loved The Beatles. This was the musical universe I came from as I began exploring music on my own in the mid-to-late 1970s. I picked up a few things from AM radio – thank you LG73 for playing Rockpile and Squeeze! But for years I struggled just to find out about music. I wish I had something like S.W. Lauden’s fabulous music review site Remember the Lightning back then. It would have made getting where I am now a lot easier.
S.W. Lauden is a music book editor, essayist, novelist, and drummer with bands like Tsar and The Brothers Steve. He is also the driving force behind Remember the Lightning, a website and semi-annual music journal focusing on the micro sub-genre of rock and roll known as power pop. Subtitled ‘A Guitar Pop Journal,’ Remember the Lightning takes its name from a 1979 song by a band called 20/20. And that’s important because 1979 was arguably a seminal year for the power pop genre, witnessing an explosion of melodic rock bands that followed in the wake of punk’s destabilization of the era’s whole rock and roll scene. Since that early but brief high-point power pop has remained on the margins of the more commercially successful music world, occasionally producing a break-out hit (“Stacey’s Mom” anyone?) but mostly surviving as a niche amongst a strongly loyal fan base. Lauden hopes to contribute something to changing that with his journalistic efforts on Remember the Lightning. By bringing together a unique mix of musicians and fans in each issue, the point is to convey some of the excitement and joy that drives the genre and helps explain its staying power despite a failure to storm the charts. And perhaps bring about some chart-storming.
Let’s talk about what Remember the Lightening is not. Despite the subtitle describing it as a ‘journal’ it is not academic in its approach. For a long time, ever since the Frankfurt school dumped all over popular music back in the 1940s, academe had a strained relationship with what the young folks like. But that began changing as boomers moved from attending the concerts to writing about them. Now there are a host of academic spaces where one can dive into ‘Beatles Studies’ or publish in The Journal of Popular Music and Society. No, this journal is more immediate, less detached than the kind of stuff academics produce. It’s about what bands and fans are into now: what they’re doing, why they’re doing, who inspired them, and whether audiences will dig the whole thing. Issue #1 that came out earlier this year lays it all out with ruminations on the genre, reflections on influential songs, and plenty of writing by and about the artists, both newbies and veterans. The range of covered acts includes the Beths, Exploding Hearts, Whiffs, Sloan, Juniper, Popsicko and Tinted Windows. Issue #2 is just out and it’s even more ambitious, with coverage of historic power pop music scenes (Philadephia), a primer on southeast Asian guitar pop, classic bands (The Replacements) and albums (Welcome Interstate Managers), musician autobiography (Kurt Baker), and great new albums from the Uni Boys and Kate Clover.
I had to find my music resources the hard way, e.g. by hosting a college radio show at the crack of dawn on Saturday mornings in the 1980s or buying countless reference books like The Trouser Press Record Guide and Joel Whitburn’s Top Pop Singles. Today’s internet makes things much easier for power pop kids to find their peeps. Give yourself a break and ‘go all the way’ to the hyperlinked web address for Remember the Lightning. Your power pop community awaits.
It may be getting cooler but there’s still time to catch a ride on a dilapidated wooden chute-the-chute or duck parts flying off a few demolition derby wrecks. You may need music for that. We’ve got your midway mixtape re-up ready right here.
Young Declan McKenna broke out big in 2015 with the mesmerizing single “Brazil” when he was barely breaking 16 years old. Since then he’s exceeded the one-hit wonder expectations of the British music press to ride a reliable wave of lyrically and musically challenging songs. His new album What Happened to the Beach is being readied for a 2024 release but a double-A sided single is out now and it’s pretty impressive. “Sympathy” has shades of early 1970s Bowie’s melodic intensity with some glam dance-slam going on while “Nothing Works” could be covered by Grouplove tracking back to a more new wave time. The latter song has just an echo of Maxine Nightingale’s “Right Back Where We Started From” buried in the tune like an Easter egg. Another artist moving on from a musically precocious adolescence is New Jersey’s Juniper. Her previous two albums covered retro girl group groups from the 1960s to 1980s but her most recent single is something else again. “I Was Thinking About You” defies such easy categorization, combining inventive horn work with a Talking Heads kind of folk/pop sensibility. B-side “Ride Between the Cars” is special too, a light and frothy bit of pop songcraft worthy of Marti Jones. LA’s Tony Marsico has played punk (The Plugz), indie rock (Cruzados), and in the background for a host of stars as a bass man for hire. But on his recent single “Rocket Girl” he unleashes a poppy rock and roll sound in league with Greg Kihn, Tommy Tutone and The Romantics. A full album in this style would not go overlooked around here. Lost and Found brings together a collection of 1990s tracks from Philadelphia’s Buzz Zeemer that didn’t make the record store racks. So many great tunes here (e.g. “Sometimes” and “Shelly Don’t Mind”) but I’m singling out a bit of an outlier, the country-ish “Answer My Prayers.” It’s as if Buck Owen’s main lead guitar man Don Rich had sprung back to life to anchor this tune. Sydney Australia’s Gavin Bowles and the Distractions have got their new long-player Phoning It In out in shops and we’re spoiled for choice in terms of what to feature. Here I’m drawn to “Here Comes the Heartache” with its unexpected melodic twists and turns and strong 1979 vibe.
The new Jean Caffeine single “I Don’t Want to Kill You Anymore” is hilarious and earworm infectious. Disguised as an homage to early 1960s girl group twee pop, Caffeine roughs everything up, from the guitar to the deadpan, almost punk sensibility of the vocal. This is one perfect feminist rock and roll statement, both hard-hitting and hooky. From the on-the-spot handclaps, to lyrics like ‘you put the whore in horrible,’ to the speed-up at the end of the record, Caffeine has produced a 3 and half minute masterpiece. York’s Bulluncork the party again with “Start a New,” a single full of swing and enough friendly bonhomie to make you want to sing along. There’s a definitely a Kinks-meet-The Pixies feel here. Santa Monica’s The Popravinas bring their candy-coated poprock back with new song “3 Month Situation.” There’s a more Brydsian country feel to this outing, though still plenty in common with the likes of The Connection and Tommy and the Rockets. The Jellybricks are teasing us with a single from their as yet unnamed new album. “Monday’s Never” is a ferocious slice of poppy rock, inspired by The Cure’s “Friday I’m In Love” but going its own way. It’s the kind of song that imprints on you more and more with every play as you hear more of the melodic nuance. The killer hooky chorus doesn’t hurt either. Kitchener Ontario’s Hyness go dark on “Driveway” with a song that lumbers along, drilling its hooks deep into your skull. The effect is hypnotic and meditatively pleasing but then brightens up in the chorus like clouds breaking to let through some sun. One of series of slow-drip release singles and that means a new album (yay!) cannot be far off.
The Jellybricks – Monday’s Never
Belfast’s Jet Black Tulips keep going from strength to singles strength. Their new double A-sided 45 is a blast of two distinct flavours of Britpop. “Young Love” rides a big guitar Oasis sound, sonorous and stadium fist-pumping good while “Dance to the Courteneers” is more Cast-acoustic fresh and poppy. A full album from this crew is going to be something else. Caleb Nichols is surely one of the most exciting and inventive artists to emerge over the past decade, comfortable in multiple genres and fiendishly creative. Last spring they dropped the EP She Is Not Your Shadow, a four song blast of bristling pop energy. Opening cut “Waylaid” struts along riding seductive guitar work and striking horn shots. There’s a Shins level of pop confidence happening here. Listening to Burner Herzog’s “Patient Zero” from his new record Random Person reminds me Rogue Wave. It’s the understated vocals and acoustic rhythm guitar dominating the mix. But it’s also the air of mystery shrouding everything. On “Thinking of You” Finnish power pop masters The Bablers dial into their Revolver-era time machine to nail the Beatles groove. It’s there in the guitar attack and oh-so smooth vocals. Right next door in Sweden Psychotic Youth offer us a few rougher edges on “Go.” From their new album Happy Songs, the song channels a more Ramones vein of punky poppy rock. Just one of 15 delightful party-worthy rock and roll tearaways.
We’ve written about theCatherines many times before. This new exclusive b-side “Where Do You Stand?” is a timely sentiment in our war-torn times, combining the band’s familiar fuzzy jangle with an urbane pop melody. Scranton, Pennsylvania’s The Menzingers deliver some heartfelt hooky Americana on their new album Some Of It Was True, nowhere more than on the should-be single “Come On Heartache.” There’s a touch of The Mavericks/Los Lobos sound here that I’m really liking. Geoff Palmer’s new album An Otherwise Negative Situation is an irrepressible capsule of explosively poppy rock and roll, one part Ramones, one part bubblegum. There just so many great tunes here. But I’m always one for outliers, like “Ignite” which leans heavily in a Nick Lowe/Ian Gomm direction. I’m also partial to “Backseat Driver” with its many melodic twists. The Golden Apples presser for their new album Bananasugarfire promises us fuzzed out guitars and joyful lyrics and that is what they deliver on “Waiting for a Cloud,” a surging splash of sparkly guitar work and vocals with a smile. West Kirby’s (Merseyside) West Coast Music Club shift the mood on their recent single “There She Goes Again” offering up a melancholy melody. The atmosphere is rather sparse and cool, like a starlit sky in autumn.
Damn Dazy. You’ve delivered again. Another absolutely addictive earwormy single. “Forced Perspective” chugs along with a Sugar Ray-meets-Beck laid back swing, only to step on the hooks in the chorus. You can’t help but join in.
The carney’s are getting a last look in on the public before closing up shop for the season. Make your last visit a musically-accompanied one.
As a confirmed Beatlemaniac I would remiss if I didn’t have something to say about the just released Beatles ‘final’ single “Now and Then.” I have to be honest, hearing rough bootleg versions of the track over the years the song struck me as somewhat slight, akin to a host of deep-cut confessional love songs John typically interspersed amongst his early to mid 1970s solo albums. Thus it didn’t surprise me that Paul, George and Ringo passed on fixing it up for the Anthology series in favour of “Free As A Bird” and “Real Love.” But the new, just officially-released Paul and Ringo fixed-up version definitely elevates the track from its more mundane demo takes. John’s new and improved vocal obviously dominates the proceedings but Paul and Giles Martin have done an expert job adding all the expected late period Beatle-isms e.g. Abbey Road-era background vocals, tasteful strings, some pedal steel guitar, and a psychedelic turn to the tune’s arrangement (particularly the ending). And yet the song is not merely a retread of past accomplishments stylistically as it incorporates the more forlorn melodic twists John developed as a solo artist. So altogether, while the song is certainly not Beatles hit-single material, it adds up to what could have been a strong album cut and respectable addition to the band’s canon.
Given the band’s stature it should not be surprising that cover versions of the new tune are already appearing. Here it is fascinating to see others interpret how to render the song in a suitably Beatles key. Moving through the different eras, Dreamer Jazz re-imagines the song as it might have been played on Ed Sullivan, complete with video. DJS’s David A. Rodriguez really nails a host of early era Beatle-isms, including John’s distinctive rhythm guitar work. Apple Jam move the sound closer to the Hard Day’s Night/Help period and their considerable experience recreating the Beatles’ sound really comes through here. Timmy Sean takes inspiration from the same period but his sound ends up coming off more late seventies poprock, begging the question as to whether that might have been where the Beatles sound would have developed. Lastly Super 8’s version (that we featured before) takes things in a wholly new direction, even adding an original bridge to the song. In many ways, Super 8’s version is really the most creative interpretation, bold in its choices but still successful in execution.
Apple Jam
The Beatles really don’t need any more money but these clever cover artists surely do. Give them a visit to check out where their fab influences have taken them in their own work.
Autumn on the midway can conjure images of bright lights and romance or screaming kids and stale food. The same is true of midway music. To move your midway mixtape in the right direction we’ve selected 21 tunes that will survive an encounter with wildest rollercoaster ride. This is the first of two installments.
We kick things off with a reconstituted version of Gen 11’s “Month of Sundays,” a deep cut from their 2020 EP California Grown. This new version sounds fresher and more present than before, the rhythm guitar is louder and more to front of the mix. Definitely more ‘let’s party’ this time around. Next up Oklahoma City’s The Lunar Laugh and the advance single from their new album entitled “Born Weird.” The song combines so many traditions, a bit of pop punk with touches of more baroque pop influences, twin-fueled by chugging guitar work and a swirling mix of vocal styles. A new Rinehearts album is something to get excited about and Full Bloom does not disappoint. The record is full of that Perth-stamped poppy rock the town is so well known for. But for the moment, just sample “Falling Down” so you don’t get too over-excited. There are some classic FOW turns of melody and vocal phrasing here but so much more too. Now for something different, check out “Everyday I Find the Luck” from Carlisle UK’s Hardwicke Circus. It’s like Billy Bragg joined Haircut 100 and the results are fun, fun, fun. The vocal interplay is exquisite while the tune just charges along. Somerdale sounds like the name of some kind of American teen telenovella. But this band are a distilled dose of 1970s poppy guitar rock. “Come Enjoy” is from their first album in seven years, Let’s Get Started, and it vibes 1976 without even trying. It’s the guitar, it’s the tone on the lead vocal, it’s the wall of background vocals buffeting the tune. It’s the whole package.
It was a tough call between featuring SLD’s “A Perfect Day” or “Hiding.” The former has got a backbone of non-stop chilling background vocals anchoring the tune while the latter works a Lennon-esque combo of acoustic guitar and lonely vocal adding a surprising McCartney-ish twist one minute in. You can consult both for yourself from the band’s new LP Like Sunshine. I might be accused of choosing the off-brand tune from Dolph Chaney’s new record Mug with “Love Around You.” But the interplay between the tender vocal and heart-rending steel guitar lines is like a big hug and who doesn’t need that about now? Count me in. Chicago’s Bur have got an interesting mix of sounds going on their most recent LP We Are Bur, a combo of indie, punk, and Beatlesque elements all pulling in different directions. But it works. Like on the ear wormy “Kush Burns.” Smooth with wonderfully rough edges. With “All Your Heart Can Hold” Brooklyn’s Gerry Devine serves up poprock perfection. This is 80s hit radio good, so eminently listenable. And Devine is offering the whole LP In My Own Good Time for free. A slightly better known group from Liverpool are releasing their version of our next song “Now and Then” but give the indefatigable Super 8 his due, his version is pretty special. He fills out the tune and adds a few surprises along the way. Just one of 12 fab familiar reinventions from his free covers album Raindrops on Roses.
San Francisco’s The From have got a loose and friendly vibe. There’s a slacker indie rock and roll sheen to everything on their debut LP Tomorrow Was Better. With influences ranging from Cheap Trick to Any Trouble it’s all guitars and gas guzzling cars and rocking tunes. “Friend Collector” falls somewhere between 12 bar bluesing and a poppy boogie rock that Steve Miller Band invented. Late Bloomers mine a more early REM shoegaze jangle seam on “Bitter Pill.” The rest of their recent LP S/T is more of the good same. Another kind of rock throwback can be found the Mighty Dan Gerous record Everybody Needs a Hero. “Don’t Go” has got an early Cars new wave finesse combined with a more straightforward American heartland AOR FM radio sound. “Bitch I Love You” is pretty special too. Looking for a Merseybeat fix? The Newds have definitely got what you need on their one-off single “The Street Leads to the River.” It’s got jangly guitar and a lovely Billy J. Kramer breeziness. The mysterious Josh DC (from ‘England’ UK) puts a slight drone on the vocal of “Rip of the Rulebook” just like Beck might do. The song has got some interesting change ups and ear wormy quality.
I often refer to The Front Bottoms in talking about other bands, their sound is that distinctive to me. It’s a curious meld of dissonant indie rock with occasional folk flourishes. New album You Are Who You Hang Out With is no different. “Outlook” kicks off all earnest vocals and acoustic guitar only to break out in the second third with a heavy guitar attack and a swell of harmony vocals. Vancouver band Autogramm entitle their soon-to-be-released new album Music That Humans Can Play and that fits the ambience of the first single “WannaBe.” It’s got a Thomas Dolby meets The Fixx feel, with slightly more ominous rhythm guitar work. The Half-Cubescontinue to dazzle listeners with their ongoing reinvention of nearly forgotten power pop classics of yesteryear. This time the boys take on the Ducks Deluxe/Searchers seventies tune “Love’s Melody” and lay bare the track’s melodic genius. Swedish electro-pop merchant The School Book Depository continues to drop interesting singles, this time vibing Owl City on “I’m Done.” As with previous releases, the song is a glorious wash of keyboards and an arresting vocal interplay. Charleston, South Carolina group Band of Jays offer up a smooth pop sound, punctuated by clean organ/lead guitar lines and a vocal mix that is stunning. “He Never Does the Right Thing” could be mistaken for soft rock but there’s some grit mixed in too.
The School Book Depository – I’m Done
We call a wrap on this installment of midway mixtape suggestions with Detroit’s The High Strung from their recent long-player Address Unknown. “In The Lines” will leave you wondering, is it folk? Or Merseybeat? Mannered baroque pop? Does it even matter? No. You can enjoy this tune and 11 others on the album without playing name that genre.
The High Strung – In The Lines
With all these tunes you can hit the midway with an extra spring in your step this fall. And there’s even more to come shortly.
Photo ‘Learning How To Smile’ courtesy Thomas Hawk Flikr Collection.