Songs to sing and dance to: Tom Henry, The Jeanines, Autocamper, and The Airport 77s

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You never know when a dancing and singing mood will strike. Best to be stocked up with a ready source of material to draw from. Our four selections here will have you breaking out in song and trying out moves you didn’t know you had.

The inspiration for today’s post title comes from Tom Henry’s fabulous new collection of songs, Songs to Sing and Dance To. Henry is one of those random ‘if you like’ suggestions I picked up listening to someone else on Bandcamp. I’m so glad I was lured in! As the record’s presser claims, the LP’s got a bit of power pop, garage rock, psych, and folk going on. But let’s be frank, there’s a lot of Big Star happening here. Opening cut “Close Your Eyes” is a big bold Big Star/Byrdsian delight with harmony vocals that are shivery good. The Alex Chilton influence continues on tracks like “Closer Than Before” and “Oh, I Missed the Sun,” the latter echoing the emotional cadence of “Thirteen.” Hit single? Surely “I’ll Miss You” with its Big Star-meets-Apples in Stereo sound. The instrumental choices here are a bit wacky but work. “Bella” takes things in a different direction with a bit more of a Latin feel. Folk rock gets a work out on the Dylanesque “Look to my Side” and “Going Steady.” “Art House” leans into the Farfisa organ in a way that reminds me of Squeeze or Nick Lowe. Or listen to how “But I Loved Her” is just so Beatle Paul. Another candidate for hit single-age would be “Do You Want To Be With Me?” which has a folk pop sweetness akin to the Cyrkle. Album closer “Be Mine, Forever” is pop so good it’ll make you swoon.

The Jeanines How Long Can It Last is an cathartic album experience, emotionally deep without even trying. I’m hearing so many possible influences, from Peggy Seeger to Vashti Bunyan, to the Springfields to the Smiths. Opening cut “To Fall” features Alicia Jeanine’s plaintive vocals in such a striking way. Indeed, her vocal talents are what adds a degree of genius to what is going on here. Should-be hit single “What’s Done Is Done” leaks a Smiths kind of emotional tonality and intensity. Another possible single is definitely “On and On,” a tune that shifts from pretty good to great in the chorus, where the medieval vocal effect is gob-stoppingly good. “You’ll Figure It Out” mines a sixties folk pop vein while “Satisfied” is just great guitar pop. “Wrong Direction” reminds me of the pleasant pop of The Happy Somethings. I love the aching quality informing so many cuts here, like “What’s Lost” and “How Long Can It Last.” This is a moving album that is both emotionally gorgeous and lingering in its impact.

I’ve been digging Autocamper releases all this past year, none of which appear on the band’s first long-player What Do You Do All Day? That speaks of a certain kind of confidence, for sure. The ten tunes here continue to develop the band’s unique sound, combining a twee pop sensibility with a keen appreciation for unique instrumental choices. Listen to how opening cut “Again” kicks off with clashy guitars only to cut the effect with a running-brook kind of electric keyboard riff.  Both “Dogsitting” and “Foxes” work a similar magic crossing-cutting guitars and keyboards in a dynamic tension. “Proper” leans on the organ to carry things along into the chorus where an army of guitars come in for support. “Street View” slows things down without losing sight to the band’s distinctive melodic charms.

Sure The Airport 77s are all about a kind of late 1970s new wave rock and roll sound. Their new album Don’t Let Go doesn’t mess with the formula but that doesn’t mean they’re just idling on the tarmac. They continue to develop their considerable songwriting talents on this release. If you were there in the 1980s these songs are like a new lease on that life. If you weren’t there then these tracks can let you pretend you were. “1999 (Take Me Back)” gives you a pretty clear indication of what is to come, with a strong a blast of retro guitar and prominent bass work. “Like Falling in Love” then dials up the melodic hooks. “Anyone But You” is the first of the monster should-be hit singles included here, in the style of poprock masters like Cheap Trick. “Make ’Em Pay (Don’t Make It Easy)” even vibes a bit of country energy. “Summer Can’t Wait” is another radio ready bit of single-age. But if I had to choose just one song to launch this album I’d choose “Don’t Let Go.” So smooth and hooky! There’s variety here for sure, with a Knack kind of energy on “She’s Everything” or a more Beatlesque turn to “The Hands of Time.” This is one return trip to the 1980s that definitely deserves a five star rating.

Plenty here to sing about or work out a bit of soft shoe. The secret is practice, of course. Click on the hyperlinks to get the lyrics and the dance moves down.

Photo courtesy Thomas Hawk Flikr collection.

Piping hot hits Vol. 2

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K-Tel had it coming and going in the 1970s. Single albums, double albums, double albums released as two single albums, and every combination in between. The point was, if they had concept that was selling they would keep selling it, any which way they could. In our second installment of Piping Hot Hits we take heed from the K-Tel gods and lay it on heavy.

Listen to how Fara San make their main guitar sing on “Long Lost Lover.” Lovingly exuding a 1960s folk rock vibe but deployed in a wholly different song register, more post-millennium indie rock with sweetly sung vocals. You never know quite what you’re going to get with any new release from The Krayolas. Could be a great lost unreleased track or a brand new retro charmer. “Surf’s Down” comes from a batch of songs recorded back in 1979 that never saw light of day. The Beach Boys notes are obvious but there’s hints of Harry Nilsson and Burt Bacharach too. Nashville’s The Tummies are also working the sixties side of the street on their self-proclaimed ‘summer ’25 road trip single.’ “Send Me a Picture” is an effortless bit of Beatlesque pop. A new Sloan album is certainly something to celebrate. Based on a Best Seller is due out in September but right now we’ve got “Live Together” and it’s everything that makes the band today’s most reliable should-be hit makers. It’s all hooks and harmonies, both familiar and surprising. And yet as they sing in this song, “The ‘90s nostalgia that you feel Is nothing compared to what’s to come.” So September can’t come soon enough. Danny Patrick is a guy who records great songs and put them up on the internet for free or whatever you want to pay. And it is great stuff. Like “A Girl Like You.” You’d swear this is time capsule 1980s radio find. The guitar sound could be any rough melodic FM rock radio band from the era while the harmony vocals conjure groups with a slight country edge.

Jean Caffeine’s new single “I Know You Know I Know” is a genius bit of pop restraint. It sounds so simple but the melodic arc shifts between an Everly Brothers and Marti Jones feel. The selection of subtle musical adornments are inspired. What is Joe Dilillo doing on his new single? Would we say it’s mining Billy Joel or perhaps Gilbert O’Sullivan? “When It Comes To Us” is such a beautiful tune, it definitely stands on its own but the melodic shading offers up hints of the masters in the details. Movie Movie’s muscular guitar pop rock returns on “After Hours” with a splash of 1980s synth, like The Fixx stopped by to jam. The Len Price 3 keep on rocking like it’s 1979 with their new song “Emily’s Shop.” It’s got a feel like The Jam or The Primitives and what’s not to like about that? Bret Tobias from The Bret Tobias Set is now apparently hanging out with Marty Wilson-Piper from the legendary Australian band The Church so not surprisingly his new song sounds pretty 1981 in the very best way. Just listen to the guitar shimmer dripping all over “Happiness Writes White.” Melodic magic!

The Len Price 3 – Emily’s Shop

Say hello to Liverpool’s Novelty Island and their upcoming LP release Jigsaw Causeway with their light sunny drop of McCartneyesque single-age “Foam Animals.” It’s dreamy with some mesmerizing keyboard work. In a very similar keyboard original register, Freedom Fry lull us with their usual signature lowkey whispery hooks on “Little Things.” Tchochtke ride some propulsive Beach Boys organ riffs with “Poor Girl” but the rest of the sonic pull on this song is seventies pop. By contrast Boston’s Invisible Rays is guitars to the front with a delightful bit of jangle launching “Lightning” that reaches new heights of hook-age in the chorus. When we last heard from Trevour Blendour he was Falling in Love but now it appears someone is Breaking Up With him. We don’t have all the details, other than the predictably super pre-release single “She’s Still My Baby.” It’s classic Blendour, full of updated fifties motifs and old school rock and roll guitars.

The Penrose Web is a new musical project that could be a great lost EP from the 1980s indie guitar scene. “Geraldine” captures the gentle pop vibe that could be Aztec Camera. From the not-so-gentle file, the recent Friends of Cesar Romero single “Can’t Get You” gets busy with clashy guitars and slightly screamy vocals but never loses the hooky plot. As we have come to expect. The Flashcubes returned recently with accolade-winning covers album but what fans always really wanted was some new material from the legendary 1970s power pop band. Now we’re getting it and disappointment is not in the cards. The new single “Reminisce” takes us back to the band’s classic sound with a tune that sounds perfect for the here and now. With help from The Figgs Mike Gent! Trim, Ireland’s Spearside embark with a slightly heavier guitar sound on their new EP Hatchet Man, cranking their amps well past 11. But on “Are Friends Electric” they bring back a more ringing bit of jangle guitar to contrast these heavier sounds and the results are explosively good. From a very different direction The Rallies focus their considerable pop talents on “Love.” It’s a jaunty, feel-good effort, full of their requisite harmonies and guitar hooks.

Hitting the inner groove of this second volume we have a double shot of The Brigadier. “Blessings” is breathy and dreamy with great guitar blasts coming in at regular intervals while “Perfect Surprise” embodies even more of those characteristics but perhaps Beach Boys enriched.

Well, there you have it, a second could-be K-Tel collection volume. Feel free to recombine these volumes in any form you like, re-arranging or cutting tracks as you see fit. After all, K-Tel certainly would have.

Piping hot hits Vol. 1

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K-Tel had some great album covers going in the 1970s, one for every musical fad or fashion. Let’s channel some of that over-the-top energy for a serious slab of summer single-age in not one, but two volumes. That’s 42 summer should be hits for your BBQ-ing playlist. Sizzling!

Kicking things off with something that really vibes a lot old school motifs, Police Touch Museum hit all the marks with “Lover.” The song structure could easily be early 1960s Brill Building or 1970s James Taylor soft rock. Tony Marsico and the Ugly Things also conjure up days gone by with a 1980s heartland rock and roll sound. “Goodbye to Lonely Town” has that Jersey organ and rumbly guitar that recalls everyone from Dion to the Boss. I’ve long been a fan of Tristen’s exquisitely compressed sound, so intimate yet with space for a range of great instrumental tones. “New Punching Bag” sounds a bit country, in a Neko Case outsider vein. It’s one of three killer cuts on a new EP entitled Zenith. I love the ambience of the recent Good Neighbours single “Starry Eyed.” Light and uplifting, it reminds me of the textured pop sound of bands like Foster the People. Toronto’s Pup have a recognizable pop punk sound on “Hallways,” a bit edgy and ragged in the verses but out-of-this-world pop brilliant in the chorus. Hooks for days.

Tomas Nilsson stocks “I Thought It Was Love (But It Was Not)” full of jangle and lighter-than-air background vocals. The song exudes 1960s style but in the 1980s revival sort of way. It’s not hard to hear where The Grip Weeds are coming from with “Gene Clark (Broken Wing).” The songs is a tribute to that member of The Byrds who wrote so many great songs but whose own solo career stalled for reasons that are hard to fathom. A worthy and highly listenable tribute. Hidden Pictures tell a story as old as time with “Wedding Singer (Going Through a Divorce).” The people who surround these life epochal events are expected be exemplars of what the event represents but things don’t always work out that way. This is a smooth bit of 1980s AM radio polished pop. Team power pop veteran Chris Stamey up with The Lemon Twigs and you knew something special would result. And it has. A new album is on the way but for now dig what “Anything is Possible” sonically conjures up. I love the tension, the sense of unease what permeates the tune until the chorus delivers us from evil. Austin Texas band Gentlemen Rogues have a rock solid band vibe going all over their recent LP Surface Noise. This is a band that could keep you dancing all night long. But from this record I’m drawn to the more subtle hooks defining “All Out of Crush.”

Somewhere out in the wilds of Wyoming teen twins Liam and Layne have cooked up a unique blend of ‘grungy mountain folk’ that slides between neat genre divides. “Cheyenne” is their most polished offering to date, IMHO, with killer harmonica and fiddle breaks. The Sonny Wilsons keep teasing us with solid singles. “Miss Kinetic” combines their distinctive guitar and vocal work into another strong effort. Can an album be far behind? The Trews fall into a more Americana zone that I usually get caught up in but their new single “Don’t Get Lost in the Dark” is so guitar-fabulous. The rippling lead lines keep you glued to speaker to see where things are going. A great deal of The Lightheaded album Thinking, Dreaming, Scheming! sounds very 1963 folk fair but “Me and Amelia Fletcher” is a cool departure, very 1980s pop chic. Richard Snow has something to say on his latest stand-alone single “Governments Always Lie” and he’s not being coy about the message. The tune is a very cool, an expertly calibrated slice of poppy indie rock.

With song titles like “Dream Not Found” and “Us Ugly Guys” you quickly get the sense that The King Teen is some serious kind of lovable loser on his EP Us Ugly Guys Got Style. But he sharpens the critique on “Mediocre Man,” a bouncy acoustic guitar-led mediation about over-estimating your competence. Bonus points for including an rousing, updated version of Bertolt Brecht’s “United Front Song” appearing here as “Left Two Three.” Is it just me or does Rhode Island’s Andy Lampert sound particularly English?  There’s a certain kind of sixties poprock from the UK that straddles folk and pop and psychedelia and that’s what hear coming from “The Bottommost of the Poppermost.” Speaking of folk, those folks in The Happy Somethings have resurrected a band member’s old track “A Kind of Loving” and it’s a delight, a gentle paean to unrequited love. Your Academy name the elephant in the political room right now in the US on “National News,” calling out the clown holding the country hostage. Stylistically the vibe is late 1970s Fleetwood Mac in AM radio hit mode. Liquid Mike often leans into a heavier sound somewhere in just about every cut but “Selling Swords” has to be his poppiest offering yet. Very Wavves or SMRS.

The cover and title of the new Fortitude Valley LP says somebody’s is gonna get a serious talking to. Don’t be fooled by the fresh guitar pop vibe guiding early release single “Sunshine State.” Lead singer and songwriter Laura Kovic is only just getting started. Stay tuned for the rest when Part of the Problem, Baby comes out next month.

21 should-be hits and that’s just Vol. 1! Check your fave internet fanzines soon for deets about Piping Hot Hits Vol. 2.

Pacific overture: Couple and Hoff Dylan

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Social media strangers often give me the best tips for out-of-the-way poprock gems. Like today’s acts, hailing from across the bright blue Pacific Ocean, one from Malaysia and the other from Japan. East definitely meets west in terms of sonic influences and dissonances. Get ready to set your translation settings to stunning.

Malaysia’s Couple put out a few albums in the millennium’s first decade but then hit pause until the release of 2022’s Poptimism. Wow, what a transformation occurred in the interim. Where the early albums were solid poprock with a hint of edginess their new venture added multiple layers of sonic sophistication, effortlessly melding different styles and influences while singing in both Malay and English. Things begin with “Marlam Minggu,” a track that really sets the scene. You know this is not going to be your average pop album. To be fair, the album features more than few off-the-shelf pleasant pop tunes like “Let Me Love You” and “I Do” that vibe classic 1950s and 1960s song motifs. By contrast “Think About It” comes on like some kind of new wave fifties reinvention. Then there are songs like “Be My Baby” that mess with the form, full of buzzy guitar at times and oh-so-smooth vocals. “KTYT” even brings in a screamcore interlude to break up the poppiness. In a throwback vein “Goddamn Mighty Tune” is a light pop punk tune with a Weezer-ish flavour. “Sedia Sedia” starts with striking guitars and then lays in some pretty keyboard work. Sometimes the guitars come in spare as on “Call Me,” only to flare out with a sudden addition wall of sound of multiple guitars, voices and synths. “Slap Slap Nak Raya” sounds like a single, shaped by classic vocal contrasts and a mellow but striking hook. Call me poptimistic but I think more Couple would make a welcome import.

Japan’s Hoff Dylan are an enigma in more than a couple of ways. First, they have so many LPs, EPs, compilations and one-off singles that it’s hard to navigate the band’s career and musical development. Then the band’s song titles are sometimes translated to English, or remain in Japanese but in Roman (i.e. English) lettering, or appear in Japanese script. And there’s the album content itself, which can range from Beatlesque to winsomely childlike. After needle-dropping as much of their catalogue as I can find I’ve pulled out 22 pretty solid cuts of the poppy rock variety but I’m sure there’s more. Here I’ll just highlight a few outstanding examples, IMHO. Starting with “Koi wa Itsumo Maboroshi no Youni” from the band’s breakthrough LP Washington, C.D. Check out the George Harrison-worthy lead guitar riffs, buffeted by classic 1970s keyboard tones. “Gokuraku wa Dokoda” from 1998’s self-titled Hoff Dylan kicks off with some BTO-ish guitar chords before bringing another great keyboard vibe. This is group that are masters at dropping in a recognizable musical phrase. Listen to how they evoke the Beatles “Dr. Robert” at the start of “Madman” or repurpose the opening lick of the Knack’s “My Sharona” for “Manamana.” After over two decades of releases, Hoff Dylan continue to rework disparate influences into something new, sometimes sounding like the Beatles, McCartney in Wings mode, 10cc, or even Sloan. Their most recent record is 2022’s Island and it is no exception, offering up pretty easy-listening poppy cuts like “Kaze no Sasoide.”

Koi wa Itsumo Maboroshi no Youni
Gokuraku wa Dokoda
Kaze no Sasoide

It’s a great big beautiful world out there, full of winning tunes and solid acts singing in all sorts of languages. You don’t need to understand the words to get their message. Tune in with the hyperlinks above.

Photo ‘An old school Tokyo record shop‘ courtesy Tokyo Times, May 18, 2022.

Spotlight single: Mike Browning “Lost In Conversation”

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Mike Browning has dug up a real gem of a minor hit from the 1960s to offer up as a cover. “Lost in Conversation” was originally recorded by Halifax, Nova Scotia band The Great Scots in 1965. Their story is a hilarious mix of lucky breaks and near misses, featuring tartan costumes and an apparent willingness to do anything to get attention. The band was originally known as The Beavers and all four members sported mohawk haircuts. This was 1962! Then as The Great Scots they donned kilts and working the Scottish Canadian angle mercilessly. Epic Records signed them to a record deal in 1965 but only put out a few singles, so quickly did fashions change in that era. Eventually, as sixties nostalgia created an audience for lost bands, two albums of material recorded by the band back in the day did get released. And it’s pretty good. You can check them out at their various internet real estate.

But back to Mike Browning’s new single. The original of “Lost In Conversation” comes off like a cross between Merseybeat and Paul Revere and the Raiders, jangly but with a muscular vocal. Browning’s version tweaks the jangle guitar, adding extra colour to the tone, while his vocal is more folk-rock innocent and slightly plaintive. It’s a winning formula, worthy of repeat plays. Now the question is, shall we expect more from Browning in this vein? Here’s hoping.

Mike’s more than just one cover song. You can dig into his back catalogue at his Bandcamp page.

Geek rock rules!

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I was minding my own business scouting out new Jonathan Coulton material on iTunes when out of the corner of my eye I spotted some crazy song titles in the ‘listeners also bought’ section. There seemed to be a heavy focus on superheroes and celebrating nerdiness. Well before I knew it I had needle-dropped my way through a hitherto unknown genre to me – geek rock. You can find plenty of essays online to tell you all about it but, suffice to say, it tends to be defined by quirky songwriting, a passion for outsider culture, and plenty of hooks. Here’s just a smattering of what this scene has to offer.

In many ways Chicago’s I Fight Dragons are the poster child for this genre with song titles like “Geeks Will Inherit the Earth,” “Save World Get Girl” and “No One Likes Superman Anymore.” Their on-the-cheap videos are pretty fun too. Personally I’m keen on “cRaZie$” from their 2011 album Kaboom! where they lampoon the cabin-in-the-woods horror genre. Now if you want an act that commits to the bit, check out Harry and the Potters. They have released something like four albums, six EPs and host of one-off singles and every song inhabits the Potter universe. As I don’t really know just where to start here, I’m featuring a cool track from the band’s last long-player Lumos entitled “The Banality of Evil (Song for Albert Runcorn)” that features a great guitar solo. Kirby Krackle dives deep into the geek rock bag of tricks with songs about superpowers and evil villains and the need for proper insurance for henchmen. But another side of the genre is all about riffing on recent pop culture. KK excels here with a load of stand-alone tunes, like this paean to Stranger Things heroine “Eleven, I’ll Wait For You.”

Given its goofball tendencies the geek rock genre can attract more than few one-off ‘we’re just passing through’ efforts. Grandpa Griffith have a whole album of songs about talking monkeys and unstoppable robots but nary a write up anywhere. Oh well. “Aquaman” from their LP Electric Scooter Holiday Blowout is worth grabbing your attention. Mark Aaron James also has songs about superheroes (“Aquaman’s Lament” “Batman’s Reply”) and science fiction TV obsession (“Shatner at the Convention”). But he also embodies the genre’s tendency for self-reflective protagonists.  Both “This Song’s About” and “This Song Would Be Better” have the singer tied in knots about what his songs mean and the meaning of success, in a style that marries Glass Houses era Billy Joel with early Elvis Costello. Unfortunately, neither is posted on bandcamp so you’re getting more Aquaman. Buffalo’s Ookla the Mok are spilling over with talent. It’s all here: superhero riffing, geek convention in-jokes, popular culture call outs, and monkey concept albums. But behind the jokey-ness is serious musical talent, akin to They Might Be Giants. You won’t go wrong dialing in to any of their albums but I’m starting you on “Medieval Evel Knievel” from their Nerdvana EP. Funny and oh so well played.

Grandpa Griffith – Aquaman

Jonathan Coulton definitely has plenty of geek rock material but I’m wrapping this feature with a song from his 2017 Solid State record that is simply a straightforward should-be hit single, “Sunshine.” There’s still plenty of Coulton’s lyrical cleverisms with lines like ‘The roaches took the kitchenette We just let it go.’ But the hooks in this chorus are blindingly good.

Get your geek on with any of these fine artists wherever geek rock is sold (hint – hit the hyperlinks for the e-store).

Photo: fragment of mast image from Ookla the Mok bandcamp page.

Breaking news: The Mayflies USA, Nelson Bragg, The Geezers, and Shake Some Action!

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Serious news flash here this time out with a new release from a legendary band 23 years gone, a magisterial collection from a celebrated sideman to legends, a new album from some Germanic geezers, and a collection of EP tracks from a band of contemporary modsters. It’s a full program for sure.

I was super excited to hear about The Mayflies USA reunion. The band’s three turn-of-the-century albums are right up there with the best of that era’s hooky poprock (along with bands like Fountains of Wayne and Matthew Sweet). I could hit repeat on “Walking in a Straight Line” over and over again. The new album Kickless Kids leans more toward a poppy indie rock vibe rather than outright power pop, as evidenced by the opening cut, “Thought the Rain Was Gone.” But that is more than ok. “Calling the Bad Ones Home” even hits a few classic rock marks with a Keith Richards rhythm guitar swing before rolling out the hooks. “Kickless Kids” shifts things back into a more guitar pop register. Ringing guitars are definitely up front on tracks like “Railway Spines” and “Cabbagetown.” By contrast, a song like “Jewel of Russia” springs some particularly engaging melodic hooks in the chorus. There’s also a splash of country in places, like the Freedy Johnston-ish “Come On Down.” Or you can dial into a classic rock and rock jam feel on “Twilight Alright.” Welcome back Mayflies USA, it’s like you never left.

Veteran LA session player and longtime Brian Wilson sideman Nelson Bragg has still found time to put out his own music from time to time. Now he’s gathered together what he considers his poppiest material for Mélodie de Nelson: A Pop Anthology. It’s hard to argue with his choices. Songs like “Lived This Life Too Long” and “You Could Believe” are awash in harmony vocals and subtle hooks. Jangle is also here in spades on tracks like “Forever Days” and “I’m In No Mood.” And “Death of Caroline” is so obviously a Beach Boys love letter. Given his locale it’s perhaps not surprising that Bragg draws on a host of uniquely California influences from his catalogue. “Every Minute of the Day” has a 1970s California rock sound, with up front acoustic guitars and sonorous harmony vocals. “Glorious Days” sounds like a should-be hit single in an updated sunshine pop mode akin to recent bands like Daisy House. There are departures too. “The Last Girl I Ever Loved” has more of a rock edge, reminding me of Nada Surf with its breathy vocals. “We’re Gonna Laugh About It” is the new song recorded specifically for this collection and it sounds a bit like Pugwash’s Thomas Walsh to me. Then there are the baroque moments on both “Whitechapel Girl” and  “Seriously Girl,” the former with a strong McCartney vibe. Mélodie de Nelson: A Pop Anthology is a seriously good collection from a top rank act too long in the shadows.

Austria’s The Geezers have that Jeff Lynne magic in combining classic sounding rock and roll tunes with just a touch of synth (ok, sometimes a lot of synth), giving everything a modern but still somehow timeless sheen. This dynamic is nicely captured on “Harmony” where a spacey opening synth riff resolves into a robust and hooky poprock tune. The band’s new LP Music is full of just these sorts of surprises. The LP kicks off with “Home,” a song with a sonic wash that wouldn’t be out of place on a record from The Outfield. I love how “Echoes” marries choir-like background vocals with thrumming electric guitars before kicking into gear with a singalong worthy chorus. I want to say that the keyboard is the star here and you definitely feel its original imprint all over the record. “A Lifetime” uses jaunty keyboard work as a hook that won’t let go, leading into a killer chorus. “The Happy Life” takes its synth work into an almost Bronski Beat direction. And then there’s “Future Love” which has a sonorous edge comparable to Tears for Fears’ “Mad World.” But the guitar work on this release is no slouch either. “Modern Days” is a brilliant synthesis of 1960s power pop and more modern song styles. The opening lead guitar line is positively mesmerizing. “Bit By Bit” is a swirling jangly winner while “Candy Cane” launches with a driving guitar lead line that is eventually matched by surging rhythm guitars.

Seattle’s Shake Some Action! have a new album entitled Top Gear and it’s a reliable installment of their love of everything mod, mod, mod London circa 1966, with a dose of Britpop thrown in too. But wait, attentive readers might recognize that this package is not an entirely new collection of tunes. The album brings together the band’s two dynamite EPs from last year (reviewed here), adding three new cuts to the mix. Hearing “I Don’t Know Where She Goes” again alone is worth the price of admission. Those organ shots are exquisite! Click the hotlink to catch up on the material from those EPs. Surveying the new songs included here, they’re definitely not afterthoughts or cast-offs. “Fake It Till You Make It” has a dance floor energy that could be 1965 or 1995. “Never Let Me Go” is a more gritty 1960s beat group number. “What Did You Leave Behind” dives even deeper into the 1960s sounding more like 1964 era Merseybeat.

You’ve heard the news, there’s definitely good rocking at midnight (or any time you might choose to play these songs). Hit the hyperlinks to get more in-depth coverage of these breaking stories.

Photo courtesy of kasiQ Jungwoo Flikr collection.

What’s in a name?

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I love interesting, off-the-beaten-path band names. And in today’s get-your-attention economy you’ve pretty much got to do all you can get eyes and ears on what you’re doing. So here are few recent finds with fun, out-there monikers.

As soon as I saw Megan From Work as the band name I knew I was going to check it out. It just conjures up a perfect image filled in by whatever work experience you’ve suffered from work. Anyone referred to as being that person ‘from work’ really says a lot about the connection or lack thereof. The band just put out a long-player last October and Girl Suits is great but now they’ve got a brand new single that to my ears moves into a slightly new sonic space. “Life Into a Movie” has an 1980s pop sheen not unlike The Motels or ‘Til Tuesday. Aukland New Zealand’s Dead Famous People have got an interesting story, getting started in the 1980s being briefly signed to Billy Bragg’s Utility Label. But nothing much happened then. More recently they’ve gotten back together to record new and old material and re-release a few lost gems. “Looking At Girls” from 2020’s Harry just springs out of the speakers with a bright energy. “Traitor to the Cause” from 2022’s Lost Person’s Area is biting and condemnatory in an unexpectedly pleasant poppy way. Their new record Wild Young Ways promises to resurrect a host of lost material and from the pre-release material I’m the loving singalong-worthy “Little Flashes of Yesterday.” Like Everything but the Girl or Allison Moyet with an acoustic guitar.

Northville, New York’s Frown Town’s vocal sound reminds me Canned Heat’s Alan Wilson at times and at others Elliott Smith. That’s range. It’s all there on the band’s new album Dark Green Curtains. The presser claims the record is a folk rock effort drawing on both Elliott and Paul McCartney and I can hear that. “Stranger to Everyone” and “Rich and Famous” definitely sounds like Smith/McCartney musical love children. “The Note” has the folk covered.  There’s also a great rendition of Jo Stafford’s 1952 hit “You Belong to Me.” Miami Florida has produced Mustard Service, a band with an unusual name and an arsenal of weirdly cool tunes. Previous album Zest Pop had tracks like “I’m Sorry I Hit You With My Flip Flop” and “Get F*cked.” The new record Vice City Magic has a tighter rock sound on “Big Time” and “Going Nowhere.” Except when the songs blow out into a big spacious 1970s vibe going a la ELO.

Stuttgart Germany’s Travelin’ Man is not a far out name but when you combine it with the band’s kooky material, it’s really something else. Most of what you’ll hear on their twenty song LP Let Others Do the Thinking is pretty gritty dark nightclub rock and rolling. It’s a solid garage feel, with just a touch of the Velvets showing up regularly. But the standout track is the goofy, propulsive “My Buns Are Burning.” It could mean anything, the more far out the better.

Nothing like an out-there name to stick in your mind. Along with some hooky tunes, of course.

Photo ‘Grand Theatre, Rocky Ford, Colorado’ courtesy Thomas Hawk Flikr collection.

OK Go’s really Okay

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I’m not a die-hard OK Go fan. For years I’d read that power pop lovers should love their work, particularly their early albums. But I didn’t hear it. Creative indie rock, yes. Complex and innovative for sure but less focused on melody that my tastes usually desire. Basically, I’d put them in that modern music experimental camp I associate with Television and things that weren’t singles from the Talking Heads. Of course, they do know how to make a you-can’t-stop-watching-it music video. All this is to say that album #6 from Ok Go threw me for a loop. And the Adjacent Possible had me humming the tunes long after the last song hit the run out groove. Like me, you may have just tuned in for another fab OK Go video and there no denying “Love” is up to their usual videographic standards. But trust me, you’re gonna want to stick around for the non-video tracks this time.

Opening cut “Impulse Purchase” kicks off with a Portugal The Man kind of impact but quickly shifts to a carefully calibrated Tally Hall vibe. The precision on the performance and production here is pretty stellar. Then “A Stone Only Rolls Downhill” offers up a lilting lush feel where a melodica solo pops in with a bracing vibrancy. A slight hint of Wings circa 1976 appears here. Next up is “Love,” the aforementioned elaborate video single but don’t let the visuals obscure how this song really can stand on its auditory merits. From here the record delves into a variety of musical styles, all stamped with Ok Go’s distinctive sound. “Fantasy vs. Fantasy” initially seems like a vintage throwback but for the crisp modern production. There’s slow soul ballads (“This is How It Ends”) and solid dance struts (“Take Me With You”). “Better Than This” contrasts wonderfully melodic arcs with stop and start dance grooves. I hear a touch of Abbey Road “Going Home” and bit of that intimate Kate Bush/Peter Gabriel “Don’t Give Up” demeanor marking the aching “Don’t Give Up Now.” Listen to the orchestrated cacophony that is “Golden Devils” with its Queen-like mischievous mix of mannered pop. Singalong should-be AM pop single? Definitely “Once More With Feeling.”

It’s nice to be surprised by artists you’ve respected but not necessarily charted their every career move. With And the Adjacent Possible Ok Go move up my ‘pay attention to these guys’ list, delivering a summer 2025 constant rotation long-player.

People in your neighbourhood: Human Barbie and Smug Brothers

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Are they the people that you meet when you’re walking down the street? I suspect not. But these two bands definitely deserve to be in your musical hood if you like something just a bit out of the poprock mainstream.

Human Barbie lives in Los Angeles. Like, duh. Where else would they be? I mean, Malibu was in the traditional brand somewhere. But there’s nothing plastic or assembly line about this living doll. Human Barbie the band is wonderfully warm and analog in its sonic signature. The group’s one long-player Get a Life contains such an interesting mix of instrument choices and song styles. Everything exhibits just a touch by a dreamy psychedelia, framed within spare guitar work and keyboards. Opening cut “We Disappeared” rides some solid harpsichord piano chords, punctuated by otherworldly synth lead lines. Altogether space agey. Title track “Get a Life” is contemplative, capturing a marked generational ennui with growing up. “The Truth is Coming” leans on keyboards to cast its uncertain glow, though the warm rumbly electric lead guitar break creates a nice juxtaposition. You can go back and forth in Human Barbie’s catalogue for plenty more great musical nuggets. “Nineteen 80” chugs along with a sombre poppy elan. “The Village Priest” is another winning stand-alone song, vibing mystery and a bit of folk rock. The band’s most recent single “Slow Down” has a fuller, more pastoral feel with an almost gospel shading in the sing-along chorus.

In the list of bands with a serious work ethic, Smug Brothers would surely get more than a footnote. Ok, there was that nine year break between albums one and two but since then they’ve been plying the record bins with singles, EPs and LPs with a clockwork consistency. Album number ten Stuck on Beta is almost out. From the tracks presently available the record is clearly following in the style of their previous LP In the Book of Bad Ideas with plenty of jangle. “Paper Jane” reminds me of those early Church records while “Take It Out On Me” has a rougher beat group edge but plenty of hooks too. While we wait for the full album release you won’t go wrong digging into the band’s catalogue. Check out “89 Lullabye” from their last album. Positively buoyant. Or you can enjoy the carefree poppyness of “It Seemed You To Me” from Application of a Twig. Or you could even reach back to Disco Maroon for the should have been a hit single track “My Little Crowd Pleaser.” Really you won’t go wrong needle-dropping your way through any of their LPs, there’s variety and plenty of it.

Sometimes you find the most interesting things poking round the shops in your neighourhood. Or looking further afield. Just because they don’t live next door doesn’t mean they can’t be part of your musical hood.

Photo of art by Mac Connor for the 1958 novel ‘Midtown Bomber’ courtesy zaza23 (Jessica)’s Flikr collection.