
It’s guitars all over the headlines with this line up. Chunky, droney, dissonant, hooky: this big story comes at you in a variety of styles.
Grant Lindberg emotes a droney guitar goodness that’s great to come back to. It’s the bedrock lining his new LP After Life where you get 11 new tracks that manage to capture the essence of Lennon circa 1967 with just a splash of Matthew Sweet and Oasis. “In My Own Way” makes for a stunning opener, giving you all the essential elements of this album in one knock-out single. Early on the song sounds very Big Star acoustic but when the mellotron keyboards kick in the musical tide shifts more toward Britpop. Then Lindberg lets loose the slow burn guitar grind on “Lying Fakes.” Dissonant guitars versus the strong pull of melody, that’s the basic tension defining this record. Songs like “So I Can Fall,” “Threes,” and “Sun in My Eyes” ride a guitar dissonance that really gets in your head. “It Comes and Goes” breaks with this formula somewhat, opening with acoustic guitar and then progressively fattening up the sound as things go along. Title track “After Life” offers you something different again. The Verve-like sheen is buffeted by mellotron keyboards and very Beatlesque lead guitar work. A Beatles vibe is strong on “Some Days” and “Something Wrong” too, the latter hitting all the Lennon marks. Then, in a departure from the album’s highly consistent sonic wash, “Behind the Door” evokes a Fountains of Wayne style while “Days and Nights” shades into Elliott Smith territory. Don’t wait for the afterlife when you can enjoy After Life now.
There’s a sweet spot in the Beatles career when the guitars get a little edgier but retain their distinctive poppy demeanor. Revolution era definitely. Chris Lund inhabits this world and then some on his new long-player Surveillance. And like Lindberg he’s coming at it from the Lennon side of the street, most of the time. The other main comparator act for his stuff is Cheap Trick, obviously. “You’ve Got a Lot of Nerve” fills the gap between these two bands perfectly, full of droning psychedelic hooks with just a touch of rock abandon here and there. Then “Crazy Driver” is so spot-on Robin Zander with Rick Neilson-worthy guitar riffs. “Got Me Running” hits the Cheap Trick marks pretty hard too. Both “Blow Up the Night” and “God Loves All His Children” vibe solo Lennon for me but “Swallowed” leans in a more McCartney direction. Mixing things up, Lund offers up a blistering political takedown of someone we all know on “No Ethics, No Future.” “Come On Home” shifts between nice jangle, Byrdsian vocals, and straight up seventies melodic rock. Then “Touch or Go” goes in a completely different direction with its distinctive new wave bite. Altogether Surveillance is another rocking melodic tour de force from Chris Lund.
Some bands sound like they trying to earn your ear-time with every outing. That’s Superchunk in a nutshell. Album #13 Songs in the Key of Yikes has launched and its ten new tunes are out to win you over, all over again. “Is It Making You Feel Something” starts things off with a should-be hit single. It’s the kind of song that when it hits the chorus you suddenly realize you’re ready to sing along. Next up “Bruised Lung” has a relentless drive to the rhythm guitars that is utterly seductive. The secret sauce on this record is undoubtedly the pacing. “Care Less” has a lurching pop goodness, the kind of song that has you rocking back and forth in the audience. “Stuck in a Dream” surges along only to quicken the pace just a bit more in the sing-along chorus while “Train on Fire” balances an almost military rhythm with a vocal melody puling in different directions while “Everybody Dies” sounds alternatively dire and positive. And then there’s album closer “Some Green,” a song seemingly just light and frothy until it unholsters a wickedly janglicious chorus. Damn but Superchunk have done it again, delivering a highly listenable long-player.
Barely Real is different kind of guitar album. And Worn Through is a different kind of guitar band. There’s a touch of roots to the overall feel of what is going here. Not quite Americana as the songs here are sans the country notes for the most part but down-home nonetheless. “Difference Is Thin” kicks things off with a BoDeans easygoing charm. “Omaha” turns up the jangle to good effect. Then “Barely Real” takes a number unpredictable turns, defined by some great organ back up and sparkly lead guitar runs. There’s a broad church folk vibe to a lot of songs here. “Blind As a Dove” has a Bombadil feel. Both “Invisible Ink” and “KY State Flower” remind me of Darren Hanlon’s mix of indie and folk sensibilities. “Infinite Scrawl” does dip into the country scene courtesy a distinctive pedal steel guitar appearance but the tune is more mid-period REM to my ears. Personal faves: the peppy and poppy “Working on It” and the indie Everly Brothers-ish “Arms Forever.” Album closer “Variations on a Theme” builds nicely to a great meditative ‘na na na’ chorus.
You can turn down the sound but you can’t escape the impact of these guitar-centric headliners. Why not let these guitars ring at your own volume with your own personal story follow ups? Just click the hyperlinks to delve a bit deeper into all the hooky details.
Photo courtesy Rob Elliott’s Swizzle Gallery.
