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Monthly Archives: February 2026

Curses! It’s Pony and Triples

23 Monday Feb 2026

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Artist Spotlight

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Pony, Toronto, Triples

I can hear this stock villain refrain when confronted with our double-whammy of Toronto power pop goodness. I mean, there is something rather Dudley Do-Right about Canada’s largest metropolis. The place tends to register a ‘meh’ on the list of world class cities. Recently though the local music scene been blowing up the world stage, gaining international attention for its eminently discoverable talent. These two acts are ready for their close-up.

I’ve been waiting for Pony’s new album to drop for some time. Clearly Cursed really delivers on the promise of its early release singles and even adds more stylistic diversity over its ten tracks. “Superglue” and “Freezer” came out last year, brimming with should-be hit-single hooks. My immediate go-to comparisons were The Primitives for the former and Juliana Hatfield on the latter. These were headphones-on, soundtracking-your-life, spirit-lifting stuff. The band presser made mention of inspiration from The Cure and Jesus and May Chain but I think “Middle of the Summer” opens more like a 1983 synth-rock entry, aided by some cool guitar riffs and a Tristen-worthy vocal. Then there’s the striking vocal turns-of-phrase on “Blame Me” and “Sunny Something” that are just so Juliana Hatfield. Things do get a bit more rocking on “Hot and Mean” and “Every Little Crumb” where the band crank the amps and add some crunch to the guitars. But the pop instincts on this record is where the real magic happens. I hear it on “Clearly Cursed” with its swinging Go Go’s vibe and “Swallowing Stars” where we head back to a shoegazey Tracy Tracy territory. If Clearly Cursed is an affliction let’s hope there’s no cure.

Triples was originally a duo of sisters, Eva and Madeline Link. Then Madeline left to focus on another musical project, leaving sister Eva to either go solo or re-invent what Triples was about. She opted for the latter, filling out the band’s early indie DIY sound with a more expansive full band feel. Every Good Story is the EP evidence of this transformation. It’s just four songs but the selections give us a good snapshot of what is going on here. Opening cut “Old Routine” pushes some dissonant guitar work to the forefront but the vocals are pure power pop in a Liz Phair kinda way. “Gonna Be Good” gives us some crashing rhythm work that slides a hummable vocal melody overtop. “Happy” too opens with some big guitar noise only to resolve into a skipping along, singalong vocal. “Be Around” builds its sonic cocoon around some neat lead guitar licks. The only misstep here is that the whole EP adds up to a miserly 12 minutes of recorded music. Cruelty. That’s what I call it. Only a full LP will soothe my savaged breast.

Villains always react poorly when obviously good things arrive on the scene. Pony and Triples bring a little Canadian light to our increasingly dark world. Soak it up via the hyperlinks above.

Photo ‘There Was Someone That I Knew Before’ courtesy Thomas Hawk Flikr collection.

Singles for a weary world

16 Monday Feb 2026

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Poprock Themepark

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Dazy, Deadlights, Gift Horse, Kurt Baker, Langhorne Slim, Marc Valentine, Mod Lang, Motorists, School Book Depository, silk daisys, Sloan, Tad Overbaugh, The Maureens, The Pozers, The Pretty Flowers, The Rubs, The Sylvia Platters, Together Pangea, Tom Emlyn, Uni Boys, Vegas with Randolph

Sometimes I imagine a large radio tower blasting our choice singles around the planet. It’s definitely what the world needs now. A little bit of the carefree, some heart-fluttering excitement, perhaps even a hint of inspiration. Take some time out from world affairs and your personal troubles to check out this suite of specially curated should-be hits. You’ll be glad you did.

Let’s launch with something that conjures a bit of early Go Go’s but with a breathy male vocal. The Sylvia Platters give us this and more with “Tactical Lunchbox.” There’s even a B52s organ break. Jangle deficiency is a serious ailment, particularly in these dour winter months. Motorists have just the remedy with “Frogman.” Those luscious guitar tones are gonna make anybody feel better. The same critics who can’t say enough good things about bands like The Lemon Twigs pause when a new Uni Boys single comes on. As they should. These renaissance new wave popsters have done it again with “I Don’t Want to Dream Anymore.” Somebody pinch me, it must be 1979 again. Jeff Shelton’s Deadlights take us back to the 1980s with a faithful cover of House of Love on “Destroy the Heart.” Dig the drone. You can practically smell the smoke machine. Brisbane Australia’s Gift Horse get the jump on dad day with “Fathers.” The song has a muscular folk rock sensibility, like the Byrds with a Marshall stack.

Dallas, Texas combo The Pozers step on the 10ccc pedal for their contribution to the International Pop Overthrow compilation album #26. The vocal swoops compete with a relentless poppy keyboard driving things to a cheery place. Langhorne Slim has been hanging around the roots scene for years but his new album The Dreamin’ Kind is something else. I mean, it is rootsy but it is so much more too. Listen to the tight pop articulation of the should-be single “On Fire.” It has the soulful poppy chops of an Aaron Lee Tasjan. It’s dancey, it’s heartfelt, its AM radio playable. Kurt Baker has been offering up Elvis Costello-ish pop-slathered rock for a while.  “Undertow Afterglow” amps that influence even further than usual. The B-side cover of the McCartney/Costello composition “My Brave Face” is pretty special too. Detroit’s Mod Lang are building quite the buzz about the near imminent release of their debut long-player Borrowed Time. Early release single “TV Star” blasted some good time 1970s power pop vibes for sure but I’m digging the more Beatlesque “What I Can’t Have.” This is gonna be one hot album drop. silk daisys get the dream pop label but I’m hearing Darling Buds and Primitives. Sure, there’s shimmer all over their recordings but an essential guitar pop goodness emerges with clarity on “It’s a Laugh.”

Things rarely go sideways with Dazy for me. There’s something playful and seriously inventive about how their songs get put together. “Delusions of …” has a Sugar Ray vocal, some La’s guitars, and Beck production sensibility. Dutch outfit The Maureens revive a 1960s group vocals sound with folk and pop inflections and it’s all there again on their new single “Doing Fine.” And that means an album can’t be far behind. The organ opening Marc Valentine’s new single “NY UAP” is just so 1966 it hurts. In a good way. This is retro rock and roll that still sounds fresh today. Punk veterans Together Pangea are still turning it out. “Shattered” offers you grinding guitars and a shuffle beat that dance floors were made for. At first listen you might think Tom Emlyn’s “Starsick” has seen some poet press-ganged onto stage in front of a band playing a bit too fast. But as the song develops the words and music meld together in a frenetic kind of energy that is way cool.

I don’t really know where Växjö is. Somewhere in Sweden I take it. But given the latest single from that country’s School Book Depository I imagine there’s someone belting out their favourite song there. This band ace atmospheric pop singles and the current “Karaoke” is no exception. I love the lead guitar roll-out that launches Tad Overbaugh’s “Rearview.” It’s what pushes this ‘new country’ entry into something broader genre-wise. And that great guitar work continues throughout. Capitol city’s Vegas With Randolph get right back on the new album prep train floating an early effort with “Let’s Fool Around.” It’s a smooth pop rocking number in a manner similar to indie acts like Vanilla and the Zombies of the Stratosphere. And that’s good enough for me. Another Sloan album, another spate of rave reviews. That’s what the release of last year’s Based on a Best Seller produced. I loved it, not that band needed accolades from the likes of me. So I’ll just throw some light on the fab deep cut “Here We Go Again.” Nobody quite knocks it out of the park as reliably as these guys. Chicago’s The Rubs throw up something a bit different with their new song. “Starting All Over” sounds likes it has dropped right out of the 1970s pub rock scene. Only the wobbly guitar sound gives it a modern sheen.

It’s a wrap this time around with “Came Back Kicking” from The Pretty Flowers. This one has the oomph of something big. Like stadium singalong big. It’s the pre-release single from the band’s upcoming album Never Felt Bitter. Can’t wait to hear more.

Does the air seem lighter? I can’t tell I’m so riffed up on these radio-ready singles. And you don’t have to stop now. Click the links to keep the world away for just a little bit longer.

Photo “Union Station” courtesy Thomas Hawk Flikr collection.

Spotlight single: Banda AL9 “She Can Do It All”

11 Wednesday Feb 2026

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Spotlight Single

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Banda Al9

Brazilian Beatlesque sensation Banda AL9 are staging an American invasion, releasing their first ever official single in the United States with “She Can Do It All.” Anyone familiar with their fabulous first two albums, Amore E A Lei (Love Is the Law) and On Nono Rei (The Ninth King), know the drill. The song is brimming with all the chiming guitar and John, Paul and George-approved harmony vocals the duo have become known for. Written by indie power pop darlings Kurt Baker and Wyatt Funderburk, it’s a track completely in tune with this band’s musical sensibilities. The hooks are breezy and will have you double hand-clapping along. Both the song and the video are also dripping with easter eggy Beatle-isms for the serious Beatlemaniacs in the audience. What is really exciting is that the track is just the first single from a brand new album Hey! Hey! We’re Banda AL9, due out from Wicked Cool Records July 17. Hopefully they’ll drip release a few more preview songs to really ramp up our expectations.

Banda AL9 are all over the interweb but you can start with their record company and Facebook pages.

I think I hear a single

06 Friday Feb 2026

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Poprock Themepark

≈ 1 Comment

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British Birds, Clock Radio, Creative Writing, Don Valentine, Evening Standards, Future Clouds and Radar, Half Scratches, I Don't Hear a Single, Keys, Slow Buildings, Them Elephants, Winterpills

Whenever my power pop tank is running low I head on over to Don Valentine’s I Don’t Hear a Single blog for a reliable re-up. I can’t be going there too often or I’ll just want to cover everything Don’s got up, though our tastes do diverge sometimes on the genres adjacent to melodic rock and roll. Even when we cover the same artist we often differ on the tracks to highlight. Don is also a music reviewing machine. I can’t believe the number of new releases he gets up on his site. He’s just finished his annual ‘best of the year’ countdown and in the spirit of blog cross-pollination I’ve needle-dropped all 100 entries and pulled out just 10 that caught my ear. Let’s see if we can hear a single from amongst these I Don’t Hear A Single approved releases.

The first song to jump out a me was the mid-summer release from Keys entitled “My Temporary Game.” It’s got a McCartney undercurrent and a very strong resemblance to the Pugwash sonic imprint. Then I caught an earful of Winterpills “Lean Into the Wind” with its wonderful dreamy lustre. Almost folk pop but the electric guitars stretch such genre labels. Florida’s Evening Standards oscillate between punkish abandon and folky sweetness on different tracks. “Wild Seahorses” falls somewhere in-between, more melodic rock and roll. Clock Radio have got a crashing, swinging style all over “Blood on Chrome” where the chorus really delivers. I didn’t even know Orange, Massachusetts was a place but apparently Creative Writing hail from there. Their sound is like they absconded with a bit Athens, Georgia and moved it to New York City. “Baby Did This” has got jangly guitars and spooky vocals with just a touch of Americana. Chicago’s Half Scratches is something else again. How many people sing about getting gout again? Not many. This band slips such references into “Houses” and it doesn’t take away from the tune’s over-weaning sense of fun. Future Clouds and Radar load up a big guitar sound on “Chicken Out,” one you can dial up and float away on. Slow Buildings work up a more spare atmosphere on “Cruel Girls Are Wrong” with a kind of Rank and File singalong feel and sharp lead guitar work. I love the intimate, spooky aura established by British Birds on “Silence Daedalus.” There’s something carnivalesque about the whole proceedings. And then it’s on to a big finish with the dramatic energy oozing from Them Elephants on “Right Way.” This one’s got a buzz so strong you can feel it vibrating. Definitely solid rock.

You won’t go wrong hanging with Don over at I Don’t Hear a Single, as his “100 Best Albums Of The Year 2025: The Cut Out And Keep Guide” makes infinitely clear. This post just amounts to a Poprock Record distilled highlight reel.

Photo courtesy Alex Eylar Flikr collection.

Should be a hit single: Log Flume “Necessary Evil”

01 Sunday Feb 2026

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Should be a Hit Single

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Log Flume

If loving this is wrong I don’t wanna feel right. Barely four months out from their stellar 2024 LP release Splash Hit, Philadelphia’s Log Flume float their brand new single “Necessary Evil” and it is wickedly good. I’m dubbing the sound here ‘smash jangle’ given its dynamic pairing of punk adjacent vocals with sparkling guitar work. There’s a dissonant musical backdrop to these proceedings, almost shoegazey at times. But then the crystal clean jangle comes ringing through the sonic mist here and there with utter clarity. The vocals are delivered with a sing-along punch that should have fists waving in sweaty, packed venues everywhere. The song’s stripped down denouement is both a striking finish and glimpse into how great an acoustic version could be. This one should be busting charts from Adelaide to Manchester to Brooklyn and then some. Now I would be remiss to not mention another post Splash Hit release, the very janglicious “Get the Picture.” This one is right out of 1960s power pop central casting. A little less dissonant than their usual fare, more pure grin-inducing poppy goodness. A fitting b-side to our should-be hit single main feature.

Can an album be far behind songs this good? I sincerely hope an LP of similar singles is presently in the making. Check out everything Log Flume at their Bandcamp site.

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