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Time won’t let me: Sergio Ceccanti, Mod Lang, and Joyce Manor

17 Tuesday Mar 2026

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Poprock Themepark

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Joyce Manor, Mod Lang, Sergio Ceccanti

The Outsiders knew a thing or two about time. Despite some cool organ and a great horn section, time turned out to be a jealous mistress for them. The albums covered in today’s post return to this theme of time, whether borrowed, remembered, or left behind.

In our last review of Sergio Ceccanti we applauded his 1960s genre-fluidity and deft use of multiple guitar tones. But with his new LP Leave the Past, Don’t Look Behind he’s achieved a degree of sonic consistency that really makes the album stand out. The basic formula is evident on opening cut “When You’re Away” where a candy-coated vocal melody is punctuated with distinctive keyboard shots and a decidedly retro lead guitar break. Then as follow-up track “Waiting for You (in a Lonely Town)” gets going it hits you, the musical landscape here is very Jeff Lynne/ELO. What a (pleasant) surprise. Another departure here is the number of low-key mid-tempo numbers like “Grey Cloudy Sky,” “Burning Sun,” “Will You Miss Me,” and “Secret Garden.” They’re all dreamy pop but with a bit more heft than one might expect. And if the guitar was the star on the previous outing, the organ is working hard for MVP this time around, particularly on “You Don’t Really Care” and “The Dead Leaves of my Soul.” Should-be hit singles on this release for me would include title-track “Leave the Past, Don’t Look Behind” but especially the swinging “I’ll Run Through The Rain.” Of course, if you’re not ready to leave the past, you could look back with the closing track “The Words We Used to Say” which harkens back to Ceccanti’s previous album’s sound.

The debut LP Borrowed Time from Detroit’s Mod Lang is nothing less than sizzling. Taking their name from a Big Star tune, the band effortlessly stretch across the Beatles timeline into1970s power pop all over this record. Opening cut “What I Can’t Have” weaves a very subtle Beatlesque thread throughout the tune. It’s there in the economical lead guitar work and the curt vocal turns and harmonies. “In Advance” starts us moving between Beatles influences and a more obviously Big Star set of 1970s motifs. “Cocomode” even manages to combine a seventies boogie rock feel with an Everlys vocal sensibility. Then it’s back to the Fabs circa 1964-65 on “Those Words.” The band’s facility with the various Beatles eras is impressive. “Fool In Love” offers up amazing vocal harmonies and an acoustic guitar feel in a very Rubber Soul vein while “Borrowed Time” shifts to a late Beatles sound, particularly the amped up lead guitar in the last half of song. By contrast, “TV Star” and “In the Morning” showcase Big Star-isms from both their rock and folk tendencies. Should-be hit singles here would include the dynamite opening cut and the exquisitely vocalized “Try Your Love.” Borrowed Time is a must buy, a stunning piece of work.

Joyce Manor are a real enigma. One moment they’re pop punking their brains out, the next they’re swapping in folk-pop and power pop work-outs on their latest long-player I Used To Go To This Bar. The all-too-brief, not-even-2 minutes-long kick-off tune “I Know Where Mark Chen Lives” falls somewhere between pop punk and The Killers. But that chorus is an all-out melody attack. “Falling Into It” shifts into a new sonic skin with a softer vocal attack and some nice synth touches before unleashing some tougher lead guitar work and vocals two-thirds in. But then there’s another surprise as “All My Friends Are So Depressed” dials up a sprightly folk pop feel. Love the rumbly lead guitar break contrasting some Smiths-like rhythm guitar chord changes. “After All You Put Me Through” is similarly poppy with a low-key vocal. From there the album leans mostly toward pop punk on tracks like “Well, Whatever It Was,” “The Opossum,” “Well, Doesn’t It Seem Like You’ve Been Here Before,” and “Grey Guitar.” A stand out exception to the pattern here is the more power pop title-track “I Used To Go To This Bar.”

Looks like time’s up for this packet-of-three post but you can continue counting the clock down with each of them at their web locales.

Photo courtesy Carbon Arc 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.

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Ralph Ownby's avatarRalph Ownby on Now this from Ralph
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