***Click on 000list to see the full archive of album reviews (includes links to the reviews & stand out tracks)***

~~~Click on Thrift Store Music Player to hear all the stand out tracks on Youtube
~~~

^^^Click on Art Gallery to browse the album covers^^^

Blog Archive

Showing posts with label 4-1991. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 4-1991. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 7, 2021

Radioactive Cats - s/t

Name: Radio Active Cats
Album: s/t
Year:1991
Style: Roots Rock, Hair Metal, Blues
Similar Bands: Mr. Big, Blasters, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Cheap Trick, Tesla, Primal Scream
"One-Word" Review: Swamp Hair Metal
Based Out Of: Burbank, CA
Label: Warner Brothers, WEA Manufacturing
CD
Radio Active Cats (1991)
  1. Shotgun Shack 4:54 (single)
  2. Hold On Tight 3:27
  3. Bed of Roses 4:45 (single)
  4. Finger in the Pie 4:55
  5. Standin' in the Rain 4:24
  6. Love Razor 4:18
  7. Cry on My Shoulder 3:48
  8. Think About Love 3:29
  9. Cheap Mascara 4:28
  10. Knock Knock 3:56
  11. Wet, Hot Sweat 4:36
Album Rating (1-10): 6.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • Andy Wallace - Producer, Engineer, Mixing
  • Roberta Petersen - Executive Producer
  • Shel Graves - Vox (TV in Flames)
  • Michael Graves - Drums, Percussion, Vox (Broken Homes, Bang-Bang, Moccasoul, TV in Flames)
  • Ian Espinoza - Guitar, Mandolin, Vox (The Breakaways, Dancer, Failsafe, Beachy & the Beachnuts, Honeys. James House, The Coup, TV in Flames)
  • Ron Maldonado - Bass (Pappo's Blues)
  • Michael Doman - Drums (Broken Homes, Goodie Mob)
  • Joe Simon Seibert - Keys (Broken Homes, Rick Parker)
  • Janet Levinson - Art Direction
  • Andy Earl - Photos
  • John Jackson - Asst Engineer
  • Judy Kirschner - Asst Engineer
  • Bernie Grundman - Mastering

Unknown-ness: I've never heard of this band...and since i only have the CD, there is not much to go buy. From the song names and the band name, plus year this was released, they sound like a made-for-tv metal band, like something that would have appeared on Married With Children. I know Andy Wallace's name from Faith No More producing and other bands of that type, so perhaps hair metal is spot on. And spacing matters with this band...as they are not the Radioactive Cats, they are Radio Active...as if they are dudes who are active on the radio.

Album Review: The songs are a touch southern roots rock while singing about metal themes of women, love on the run, and roses. The songs are not that threatening, but i wonder if that is just time and the genre pushing the bar up since 1991 that makes it sound almost quaint. "Knock Knock" sounds like a metal singer fronting Cake, which is strangely enjoyable. They suffered the wrong band at the wrong time syndrome, as Alt-Grunge was picking up speed just as they were releasing this debut. Not entirely hair band metal and not classic rock inspired grunge at all, their cover-all-basis music made them a band that was stopped before it started

Monday, August 3, 2020

Skatemaster Tate & The Concrete Crew - Do the Skate

Name: Skatemaster Tate & The Concrete Crew
Album: Do the Skate
Year: 1991
Style: Hip Hop, Jazz Fusion
Similar Bands: Urban Dance Squad, C+C Music Factory, Bent Fabric, Sublime, Arrested Development, Toejam & Earl
"One-Word" Review: Mellow Jazzy Beatnik Hip Hop Samples
Based Out Of: Los Angeles, CA
Label: 4th & B'Way, Island Records
Cover & Record
Back & Record
Do The Skate (1991)
  1. Do The Skate 4:14
  2. Get Dat Grove 2:37
  3. Two Headed Love Child 3:20
  4. Irv's 4:37
  5. Willie Brown Live 3:51 (sample of "Pennsylvania 6-5000")
  6. Justice (To The Bass) Nick & Scruff Version 3:14 /
  7. Joe's Jam 6:27
  8. Right Place 4:12 (samples: Hall & Oates "I Can't Go For That," "Could Be I'm Falling in Love," and "Right Place, Wrong Time")
  9. More 3:25
  10. Hey Wooley 4:52
  11. Justice (To The Bass) Extended Boneless Mix 4:08
Album Rating (1-10): 5.5

Members & Other Bands:
  • Willie McNeil - Producer
  • D. Thomas
  • Octavio - Sax (Arianna, Luis Miquel, Los Temerarios, LabA)
  • Phil Nowlan - Guitar, Keys (Cool C, Three Times Dope, Tim Dog, Toshi Kubota, Jermaine Dupri)
  • Skatemaster Tate (Gerry Hurtado) - Vox, Producer, Remixed (Porno for Pyros, Stone Cold Boners, Tate&Greg, Boo Yaa TRIBE, DJ Shadow, Cut Chemist )
  • Willie Brown - Vox, Samples, Drums
  • Natas Kapus - Backing Vox
  • Don Kingski - Samples, Vox, Keys (Circle of Soul)
  • Chris Garcia - Bass (Sweet Daddy, Fred Pellichero, Clay Aiken, Thyne Scabbard, Eduardo Rios)
  • Jammin' Jay Davidson - Sax (Towson St U/College Jazz Ensemble, Mirjam, Marco, OC Smith, Joe the Butcher Nicolo, Cash Money and Marvelous, 7A3, Myles Goodwyn, Magnetics, Chena, Robbie B & DJ Jazz, Something Special, Cinderella, Tim Dog, Bad Mutha Goose & Bros Grimm, Pop's Cool Love, Taj Mahal, The Goats, Spearhead, Big Cheif, Ben Arnold, The Philosopher Kings, G. Love & Special Sauce, Monty Alexander, Pepper's Ghost, TM Stevens, Bon Jovi, Bruce L Cohen, Blues Anatomy, Mike Pinto, Labelle, Stroke, Greg Davis, Holy Water, Ronnie Spector, Up The Chain, Chris Kasper, Gina Sicila, American Mafia, Angel Du$t, Young & Heartless, Brit Floyd, Cast In Bronze, Pete Donnelly, Turnover)
  • Andy "Funky Drummer" Kravitz - Drums (Butcher Brothers, Electric Love Muffin, Neptune Darlings, Steady B, Billy price & Keystone Rhythm Band, Schoolly D, Boo-Yaa TRIBE, Taj Mahal, Cypress Hill, Goats, Kris Kross, Wailing Souls, Billy Joel, Mona Lisa Overdrive, Luther Vandross, Smashign Orange, Rolling Stones, Spearhead, Shawn Colvin, Joan Osborne, Big Cheif, Candy Butchers, Midge Ure, Imogen Heap, Hamell on Trial, Juliana Hatfield, Figgs, Amos Lee, Pete Donnelly  more)
  • Tupelo Joe Altruda - Upright Bass, Vox, Guitar (Afterhours, Buru jazz Ensemble, Cocktail Crew, Jump with Joey, Sounds of Zodiac, Tupelo Chain Sex, Screamin' Sirens, Thelonious Monster, Joe Strummer, Shy Party, Levi Decter, Solsonics, DJ Bonebreak, Skip Heller, Ramblin' James & Billyboppers, Big Sandy & his Fly-Rite Boys, Dread Filmstone, DJ Shadow, Cut Chemist, Ernest Ranglin, Seu Jorge, Almaz, Western Standard Time, Bebel Gilberto)
  • Cooper - Bass 
  • Z Grutzman
  • Zachary Terrell - Piano, Keys
  • Brown (Tony, Unsel) Brothers - Backing Vox
  • Kevin Williams - Backing Vox (Bonedaddys, Untouchables, Corporation of One, Matt Wood, Ben Harper, Solsonics, Guru, Jump With Joey, English Beat, Tupelo Joe, After Hours, Zakiya Hooker, Anthony Burger, John Lee Hooker, Hubbard's Cupboard, Lights Out)
  • DJ E-Z - Turntables 
  • Tim Kerr - Guitar (Bad Mutha Goose & the Brothers Grimm, Big Boys, Jack O'Fire, King Sound Quartet, Lord High Fixers, Poison 13, Monkeywrench, Now Time Delegation, Total Sound Group Direct Action Committee, Up Around the Sun, Dicks, Quintron, Sugar Shack,  more)
  • Joe "The Butcher" Nicolo - Coproducer, Remixing
  • Scruff & Nick - Additional Production & Mixing
  • Matthew Hyde - Engineering
  • Dennis Dragon - Producer, Engineer
  • Chris Bellman - Mastering
  • Bernie Grundman - Mastering
  • John Switzer - Mgmt
  • Gabriel Leconte - Mgmt
  • Gary Wishik - Legal
  • Kim Buie - A&R Coordination
  • Lori Graves - A&R Coordination
  • Rachell Stoud - Sampling Equipment Consulting
  • Deborah Melian - Art Direction & Design
  • Michael Miller - Photography
Unknown-ness: never heard of this band. But i imagine it's west coast slacker hip hop, perhaps a mix of rap & hardcore, as i'm thinking of what skaters were into in the early 90's. 

Album Review: This is a very interesting record. The mix of free flowing jazz, jazz influence like using a sample of  Pennsylvania 6-5000, and sections that sound like the Alley Cat thrown into thoughtful hip hop lyrics and samples make me think that the musicians have a Jazz background, but wanted to fuse it to what they had around them: samples, smooth rapping and youthful street-wise topics, It makes me really wonder where the inspiration came from and what they were going for. Paying respect to jazz history by introducing a younger crowd to the fusion of beatnik night clubs and scratch /sampling. Some of the songs do have a juvenile and embarrassing take (Two Headed Love Child) and it makes me wonder how it was promoted what kind of "street cred" they earned from this. Who was their fans base? Definitely positive vibes on the album, but it is genre scattered too much for the casual listener like me. Imagine Arrested Development playing with Sublime trying to update Bent Fabric and Benny Goodman big band songs while playing Toe Jam & Earl on Sega Genesis. On the other hand, this is a true mixing of race, style and lifestyle...the absolute melting pot and predicted positive face of music in the future from 1991's view. So Tate was a real skating aficionado, skating on the amateur circuit in the 70's and hosting the Nickelodeon SK8-TV show, which only lasted 13 episodes. Well before this album in 1983, he started gaining popularity amongst the skate rock audience, having songs in a variety of skate videos, even getting a song in the film What About Bob?. Apparently he was a very friendly guy that would help out anyone he could who needed it. Tate sadly passed away in 2015 from liver cancer.

Tuesday, July 21, 2020

School of Fish - s/t

Name: School of Fish
Album: s/t
Year: 1991
Style: Jangle Pop, College Rock
Similar Bands: REM, Redd Kross, Dillon Fence, James, Toad the Wet Sprocket, Collective Soul
"One-Word" Review: Slacker Pop
Based Out Of: LA, CA 
Label: Capitol
Cover, Lyrics, Tape
Lyrics, Notes, Tape
School of Fish (1991)
  1. Intro 1:42
  2. 3 Strange Days 5:12 (single)
  3. Talk Like Strangers 3:37
  4. Deep End 4:53
  5. King of the Dollar 2:47 (promo single b-side)
  6. Speechless 4:56 /
  7. Wrong 4:28 (promo single)
  8. Rose Colored Glasses 3:43
  9. Under the Microscope 4:34
  10. Fell 2:50
  11. Euphoria 5:45
Album Rating (1-10): 7.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • John Porter - Producer
  • Dave "Death" Pine - Engineer
  • Ken Paulakovich - 2nd Engineer
  • Lee Manning 2nd Engineer
  • Alison Donald - A&R Direction
  • Valerie Pack - A&R Coordination
  • Jon Blaufarb - Legal Representation, Spiritual Guidance
  • Sandy Tanaka - Mgmt
  • Josh Clayton-Felt - Lead Vox, Guitars, Drum Box (Francis X and the Bushmen, Twig, Jewel)
  • Michael Ward - Lead Guitars, Vox, Drum Box (John Hiatt, Wallflowers, Ben Harper, Innocent Criminals, Francis X and the Bushmen, Gogol Bordello, Guilty Dogs, Stripsearch, Harry Connick Jr, Lenny Laks, Mad Buffalo, Joel Simpson Quartet, Pinetop Perkins, Duck See Goose, Bo Dollis & Wild Magnolias, Jesse Johnson, Jude, Shawn Mullins, Jessica Riddle, Fastball, David Maxwell, Stripsearch, Gavin DeGraw, Eric Bibb, Avril Lavigne, Tracy Bonham, Shelby Lynne, Nerina Pallot, Five for Fighting, Anna Tsuchiya, Shannon Noll, Mikal Blue, Tom Freund, Kris Allen, Vanessa Da Mata, Glen Campbell, Sara Bareilles,  Cuntz, Sabrina Carpenter)
  • Dominic Nardini - Bass
  • Michael Petrak - Drums (Samiam)
  • Tommy Steele - Art Direction
  • Heather Van Haaften - Design
  • Dennis Kelley - Photographer
Unknown-ness: I got this cassette back in High School at some point, but i don't remember why or what they sound like. Probably heard a song of theirs on Post Modern PST or 103.9 WDRE, and saw their cassette in a cheap bin, alas, i don't know what's on it. From the muddled guitar smashing image, wacky "Shadowy Men" sorta font, i'm going to guess this is meandering jangle pop.

Album Review: So as soon as I saw the name of the second track, and it started playing I at least remember the song 3 Strange Days very well. It did, in fact, make its way onto a mix tape when i was in high school. The rest of the album falls in line with what was popular for early 90's college radio pop. Half classic rock, half power pop, with a little psychedelic, drawn out musical support, and a lot of loopy, meandering melodies that come off as more slacker rock than pure, clean pop. Singer Clayton-Felt was diagnosed with Cancer and passed away in 2000. King of the Dollar breaks down into the lyric and guitar riff of "I Can't Get No Satisfaction."

Stand Out Track: 3 Strange Days

Links:
Wiki

Monday, April 13, 2020

That's It! - Really?

Name: That's It
Album: Really?
Year: 1991
Style: Alternative, Folk-Punk
Similar Bands: Animal Bag, Frank Zappa
"One-Word" Review: Forced Punk Evolution
Based Out Of: Los Angeles, CA
Label: Better Youth Organization (BYO) Records
 Cover, Record, Lyric Sheet
Lyric Sheet, Record, Back
Really? (1991)
  1. What's So New About the New World Order 3:25
  2. Who's Life Is It Anyway? 2:33 (single)
  3. Think It Over 4:10
  4. Sometimes 2:28
  5. Getting Somewhere By Going Nowhere 3:34
  6. What Are You Willing To Die For? 3:44 /
  7. Ego 3:00
  8. Disconnect 4:01
  9. Good Men 3:21
  10. Too Bad 2:44
  11. Hole In My Head 4:07
  12. Mother 2:44
Album Rating (1-10): 6.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • Andy Hadel - Bass, Vox
  • Mark Phillips - Guitar, Vox (Down By Law, Cheater)
  • Shawn Stern - Vox, Guitar, Sundry Noises, Producer (Extremes, The Brigade, Youth Brigade, 7 Seconds)
  • Tommy Withers - Lead Drums, Vox, Producer (Brass Wolf, Frankfurter, Phume, Scorpio, Stupids, Tom & Tom, Tongue, Klute, Dr. Know, Forensic, Mean Tom, Override, Supertouch, Spectre, Tommy Stupid)
  • Anne Holmes - Guest Vox
  • Ezroy Cameron - Some Screams and Vox
  • David Leahey - Cello
  • Andy Kaulkin - Organ (Young Caucasians, Very Nice Plants, Coal Porters, Billy Boy Arnold, I Love You, Johnny Dyer, Wiliam Clarke, Rocket From the Crypt, Claw Hammer, Humpers, Red Aunts, Pietasters, Orange County Supertones, Voodoo Glow Skulls, Roy Gaines, Rick Holmstrom, RL Burnside, Hepcat, King Ernest, Merle Haggard, Lifesavas, Mannish Boys)
  • Chris Prettyman - Special Thx
  • Donnell Cameron - Recording & Engineering
  • Thom Wilson - Mixing
  • Adam Stern - Cover Painting & Logo (Youth Brigade)
  • Jamie Stern - That's It Photo
  • Mark Stern - Design & Layout (Youth Brigade, Royal Crown Revue)
Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band, but by the Midwestern style art work, and band photo on the back combined with the CA addresses and year, I imagine this is a band mimicking the RH Chili Peppers, mixing rap/funk and spastic performances with rock. I don't expect this to be good.

Album Review: Well, i was wrong about the style of the band. Many of the members and folks that helped in production have a long history (back to 1980) in the LA punk scene. Shawn Stern and his brother Mark Stern are the founders of BYO Records, created to have a voice away from corporate rock machines to show the positive side to punk back in '82, initially for their band Youth Brigade. And organist Andy Kaulkin is the founder & president of Anti- records since '98, which has put out albums by Tom Waits, Man Man, Tricky, Promise Ring, and hundreds of other bands. The album is kind of all over the place with discordant stumbling time signatures, samples and tv/film clips overlaid ("Getting Somewhere By Going Nowhere" & "What Are You Willing to Die For"). And I'm just not a fan of the vocals, as they seem either forced, or pulled in unnecessary directions and are overly emotive. "Disconnect" is a decent song, with a great powerpop intro and a catchy pop-punk jump. The vocals are well used, if only a little cringey when it gets to the chorus.

Stand Out Track: Disconnect

Links:
Discogs
Allmusic
Shawn Stern interview
BYO Wiki

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Jack Frost - s/t

Name: Jack Frost
Album: s/t
Year: 1991
Style: Easy Listening Alternative Folk.
Similar Bands: Robyn Hitchcock, Pulp, The Church / Go Betweens, Love Spit Love / Psychedelic Furs, James, Lou Reed
"One-Word" Review: Light Earthy sparce folk squad
Based Out Of: Australia
Label: Artista, Bertelsmann Music Group, Red Eye Records
Jack Frost - Cover, Inner Picture & CD
Jack Frost - Liner Notes & CD Back

Jack Frost (1991)
  1. Every Hour God Sends 4:40
  2. Birdowner (as seen on TV) 4:15
  3. Civil War Lament 2:27
  4. Geneva 4 A.M. 4:08
  5. Trapeze Boy 1:34
  6. Providence 5:14
  7. Thought That I Was Over You 4:51
  8. Threshold 4:23
  9. Number Eleven 5:45
  10. Didn't Know Where I Was 5:07
  11. Even As We Speak* (CD Only) 5:41
  12. Ramble 6:11
  13. Everything Takes Forever 4:38
Album Rating (1-10): 6.0

Members & Other Bands:
Grant McLennan - Vox, Guitar, Bass, Co-Producer (The Go Betweens)
Steve Kilbey - Vox, Guitar, Bass, Keys, Drums, Producer, Mixing, Cover, Photography (The Church, Precious Little, Baby Grand, Hex, Curious (Yellow), Fake, Into the Sun, Isidore, Gilt Trip, Mimesis)
Pryce Surplice - Drums, Computers, Fairlignt CMI, Co-Producer, Mixing
Cypress Pike - Violin
Beau Laurel - Violin
Bridgette StCoeur - Viola
Nadia Komoroski - Cello
Tsen Xu - Oboe
Jim Black - Trumpet
Trini Garcia - Percussion
Karin Jansson - Backing Vox
Scott Christie - Mixdown Asst. Engineer
Sir Donald Bartley - Mastering
Jim Paton - Cover
Geoff Aitken - Photography

Unknown-ness: I had never heard of this band. Thinking back to when I got this CD I think I got it purely as a joke, as I was really into the horror film called Jack Frost, and I wanted to get this album of the same name. I know that the place I got it had the “listen before you buy” ability, so I can only imagine I took advantage of that, although I cannot remember what the record sounds like at all. It looks very cheap, with a low res. scanned image of the elderly woman on the front, and what one would only assume is a zoomed in picture of flowers from the cover on the back. Except that it is on a popular label, Artista, this album screams 90’s low budget alternative, which could mean nearly any musical genre.

Album Review: It is funny, with only the littlest research I found out that Jack Frost is a Australian supergroup made up of members from The Go-Betweens and The Church. That puts quite a different spin on the album than what I previously thought when I bought the album so many years ago. It has a great alternative/ songwriter cred. But will it be meandering gothic music like its two main members bring to the table from their other bands? I’ve read that it is a departure from their more famous outfits, and they forge their own style on this project.

“Every Hour God Sends” has a noisy echoing shreading guitar sound in the background that creates a distinctive early 90’s pre-alternative feel. The static drum beat is adequate, sounding mechanical and synthetic. And the two familiar singers take turns with the nearly spoken verse, and the melodic Robyn Hitchcock sounding chorus. It drones on, focusing on the short repetitive buzzing hooks, and only creats a wake up in the musical breakdown where the noise feels silent, and the drums seem to come to the musical front.
“Birdowner (as seen on TV)” begins with the same produced drum sound. The vocals are again spoken, but sound crisp and unnatural, like they are uttered through a megaphone. But the tone of the vocals follows suit of familiar Australian singers like INXS and Midnight Oil. In the background is a rather happy and upbeat piano/synth section that, combined with the jangely rhythm guitar creates an uplifting atmosphere that battles the darkness in the vocals and zooming electricity sound effects. Again the songs have very basic melodies, as not to tamper with too much depth. Any depth is created by the thickness of production, which falls flat on this 1991 digital copy. The choir of moaning in the chorus is similar to Robyn Hitchcock too.
“Civil War Lament” begins with acoustic guitar, as a folky ballad. The lyrics have a thickness through double layering and harmonizing that is downright haunting. It floats on by with its one dimension, almost like intermission filler on the album, never taking off, which should never have been expected to happen. And there is a very long fade out.
“Geneva 4 A.M.” starts simply with a rhythm guitar being strum and some wood blocks echoing. These drowsy early morning melodies are comparable to the title of the song, 4am is surely the time that this music would translate to. The vocals sound very loungey, and as the song picks up the vocal layers are added as are strings for a grand orchestral effect, which actually completes the song in making it sound like Pulp. Again, the sections of the song are so cut and dry and repetitive, that they feel basic, too basic for their own good.
“Trapeze Boy” is a very short story song, vocals spoken recapping a memory of a trapeze boy. It is very monotone, like Pulp again, and the music in the background Is full of string plucking and acoustic ballady uplifting folky music.
“Providence” is a quiet, raspy and gentle song that reminds me of Love Spit Love / Psych Furs for some reason. It is definitely a song that would be played on WXPN’s singer songwriter broadcasts. It builds with each verse, as a second vocal is layered in harmonic balancing, and strings accent the slow tempo of the song. It continuously builds, but I know from the past few songs, not for it to climax in any energy exerting way. It instead rhythm guitars to the end, with odd violin sounds that are reminiscent of exotic bird noises in a zoo.
“Thought That I Was Over You” features a very Robyn Hitchcock-like vocal in the beginning, and I wondered how it could not be him. It is vocal heavy and the guitar is mixed low in the background. Drums and bass are quietly added. The dual vocals return for the chorus, and the song just hovers along via strums and sad crooning. But it is the best, catchiest song yet, probably thanks to the music being mixed very simply and efficiently, and the chorus being simple, standing out and possessing a slight variation in its final repetition.

“Threshold” starts as a spacey, earthy, organic repetitive guitar and echoing synth. Here the band takes on a little of what James did later with their Seven and Laid albums. But it sounds so synthetic that it is almost like eating wax fruit. It just feels wrong, empty and fragile. This is like light-prog. I could still see all the energy given into this song if performed live, all the lights and blowing fans, but somehow it only exports this meager sound.
“Number Eleven” features more James-Esq calm and soothing vocals and the song itself features a woodwind bongo-percussion, if such a thing even exists. It is quiet and dreamily floating song, like much of the great stuff from Laid. But this does not strike me the way that James could, the sentiment seems less genuine in only by comparison. But judgment on emotion should not be based on what Tim Booth can do, as he can create Jeff Buckley level of emotion with his voice, and that should not be the standard. This slightly new age song is something you put on to lull a date to that romantic place, with non-threatening, and somewhat reassuringly sensual vocals.
“Didn't Know Where I Was” finally kicks up the pace with an outburst of electric guitar and the louder James-like vocals. A driving drum and slide guitar backing the dual layered vocals in the chorus creates the slightly anthemic feel to this powerful song. Perhaps it feels powerful since we were lulled to sleep by the preceding two tracks, but the energy increase here is welcomed, but it is still reserved. This recording sounds like a demo, the vocals not quite on time or key, but it still sounds good.
“Even As We Speak” has a piano banging out one note very repetitively. It changes with the chord changes of the bass that is added in the background, but really is odd in that the vocals are very calm and sad, but the energy from the piano would seem to evoke more emotion. Eventually you completely forget about the piano, which is still there, but overshadowed by the rising synth notes and echoing slow tempo drum beat. Just as the chorus feels like it is going to deliver some grand catchy hook, it slinks down and falls back in place to the verse. So this pseudo hook is pretty good, but there is no delivery.
“Ramble” will most likely live up to its name, if "Geneva 4am" is any proof that their songs are summarized by their titles. The slow crusty eye beginning leads to a light drummer boy marching cadence. There is so much open space in these songs that it is hard to maintain interest. This song too is an early rising, awakening song. The vocals are spoken in tune, similar to my limited knowledge of Lou Reed. And after the vocals give out, a long, yes, rambling instrumental does nothing to change up the song-scape. The vocals come back for the last minute plus, but they seem to be a, yes, rambling story that with more emotion and energy, could have possibly been similar to James’ “Sometimes.”
“Everything Takes Forever” features a violin prominently, as that is what the entire melody is based on from the very first note. The vocals seem to be trying to fit themselves into the melody, sometimes forcing the syllables sometimes just tumbling down. Here the Robyn Hitchcock vocals return for the chorus. In the verse , the vocals are like Booth’s, and I am reminded, thanks to the orchestral sound of the strings, of the Booth & The Bad Angel album here a bit. The tempo of the song is like a slow side to side swaying sea shanty song. Or a drinking waltz.

Stand-Out Track: "Thought That I Was Over You"
Links:

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

(the) Young Fresh Fellows - Totally Lost~ Electric Bird Digest*

Name: (the) Young Fresh Fellows
Album: Totally Lost~, Electric Bird Digest*
Year: 1988~, 1991*
Style: College Radio Rock
Similar Bands: Melodic Sonic Youth, Screaming Trees, Replacements, Meat Puppets, Guided By Voices, Camper Van Beethoven~, Ramones*, Dead Milkmen* Pansy Division*, They Might Be Giants* Apples In Stereo*
"One-Word" Review: Smart-Allecky-Nerd-Snob-music.
Based Out Of: Seattle, WA
Label: Frontier Records~*, BMG*
Totally Lost - Cover & Back & Tape
Totally Lost - Liner Notes & Tape
Electric Bird Digest - Cover & Back
Electric Bird Digest - Liner Notes & CD

Totally Lost (1988)
  1. Everything's Gonna Turn Out Great 3:59
  2. Failure 2:50
  3. The Universal Trendsetter 2:17
  4. Don't Look at My Face, You Might See What I Mean 2:15
  5. I'd Say That You Were Upset 1:59
  6. No Help At All 4:19 /
  7. No One Really Knows 2:57
  8. Little Softy 3:22
  9. Take My Brain Away 2:49
  10. Celebration 3:05
  11. Picky Piggy 2:09
  12. Totally Lost 4:14
Electric Bird Digest (1991)
  1. The Telephone Tree 2:29
  2. Sittin On A Pitchfork 2:34
  3. Looking Around 2:57
  4. Hillbilly Drummer Girl 3:02
  5. Whirlpool 3:48
  6. Once In A While 3:35
  7. The Teen Thing 0:42
  8. Thirsty 2:30
  9. Fear Bitterness and Hatred 2:41
  10. Hard To Mention 2:59
  11. Tomorrow's Gone (And So Are You) 2:24
  12. Evening 3:37
  13. There's A Love 4:39
  14. Swiftly But Gently 3:32
Album Rating (1-10): ~8.0 *9.0
Members & Other Bands:
Chuck Carrol - Guitar~
Kurt Bloch - Guitar, Vox* (Fastbacks, Sgt. Major)
Scott McCaughey - Guitar, Piano, Organ, Vox *~ (Minus 5, REM, Baseball Project, KMRIA, Lowe Beats)
Jim Sangster - Bass, Guitar, Drums*~ (Sgt. Major, Lowe Beats, Trip Wires)
Tad Hutchinson - Drums, Vox*~, Back Cover Painting~(Chris & Tad)
Butch Vig - Producer, Engineer*
Mr. Colson - Engineer*
Marty Perez - Photography*
Doug Erb - Art Direction*
Bruce "Cecil" Louden - Piano*
Tina Nielsen - Idiotic Outfitting*
Jeff from Spooner - Farfisa Use*
Kim Fastback - Duff's Bass*
Conrad Uno - Producer~
David B. Greenberger - Cover Painting~
Rosanne Olson - Back Cover Photo~
Wendy Sherman - Design~
John Golden - Mastering~

Unknown-ness: Being a fan of They Might Be Giant, I heard of these guys in the lyric “She doesn’t have to have her Young Fresh Fellows tapes back, now” from the song “Twisting.” And that was enough for me to be curious. So I picked up the tape some time ago, and the CD later used, but I don’t really remember listening to them, so I don’t actually know what they sound like. Although from the cover of EBD, they look Weird Al silly. And this supports my image of them, just from being mentioned in the TMBG song. Some of their song titles also support this silliness too. I’m guessing they are a fun rock band, similar to the Dead Milkmen, TMBG, and perhaps even a little Ween. But what do I know?

Album Review:
Not knowing the singer was part of the Young Fresh Fellows, I’ve seen him and the Minus 5 open for Robyn Hitchcock some years ago. I remember that I liked them enough to keep an eye out for an album of theirs used.

~“Everything's Gonna Turn Out Great” is a dark, murky rock and roll song. Juxtaposed against the optimistic title, the song pulls in two directions of musical heaviness and lyrical lightness. The singing reminds me a bit of Sonic Youth while the music reminds me of Screaming Trees. The background singing of “Everything” reminds me of Flansburg of TMBG. Eventually it loses the darkness and just rocks out for a long repetition of the chorus. But it ends with one final dark section
“Failure” is much more poppy and typical pop-rock. Which again juxtaposes two themes, just in the opposite way: happy music, and depressed lyrics. The vocals are sung more than the first song, and are a little smoother too.
“The Universal Trendsetter” rocks from the get go, with fast paced, driving music and energetic lyrics, a bit of wackiness like John Schmersal from Enon.
“Don't Look at My Face, You Might See What I Mean” is a folky-rock song, maybe even a bit country, too. Similar to Camper Van Beethoven & Cracker
“I'd Say That You Were Upset” features horns and bops pretty quickly along with fast singing and a bouncy groove.
“No Help At All” begins orchestrally, and it turns into a slow paced slumping strut, reminding me of the Meat Puppets. The harmonized chorus is a catchy little hook. There are some lead guitar flares and the horns add to the chorus, but the basic tempo never grows or adjusts.

“No One Really Knows” is sung like an acoustic Dead Milkmen punk song. The entire rolling melody is catchy and it differentiates with slight changes in pitch to keep it interesting. It does tend to become a bit repetitive toward the end of the song, but it is a good hook. It feels like Hoboken music, or perfect for college radio.
“Little Softy” begins hard, and the vocals are uttered poetically, but without melody over the chugging bass and drums, with lead guitar fills added here and there. I can see a comparison to Guided by Voices here.
“Take My Brain Away” is quietly sung like a campfire folk-ballad with steady drums and slide guitar.
“Celebration” is a fun, nasally, bouncy pop song, similar to “No One Really Knows.” There are lots of little hooks in the vocals that remind me of oldies rock and roll singles. The verses build well, and the delivery is a short couple of notes. The word celebration is run into the ground at the end, with different inflections in the notes, which makes it interesting, but still repetitive.
“Picky Piggy” begins with a renaissance harpsichord sound, but then it picks up the pace and rocks out, sounding a bit like the Lemonheads, or a lighter Husker Du. The bass line would fit right in on a Violent Femmes record. It is a very fun and pleasant song.
“Totally Lost” had a bit of the 70’s Kinks, southern jug band sound to it with its stomp drums, umpa bouncy bass and twangy guitar. The song winds down like a watch losing its spring tension.


*“The Telephone Tree” is a loud, noisy rock song with crashing cymbals and a catchy chorus. It is straightforward in its construction, with a lead guitar instrumental break. And it ends with a second set of instrumental work with a simple line quietly buried underneath.
“Sittin On A Pitchfork” sounds just like Pansy Division in vocal style and musical production. It is short, very catchy pop/rock. The instrumentation is turned down in trade for loud, clear vocals. But the music is what the vocals parallel and carry this song along very well
“Looking Around” follows up “Pitchfork” well with a simple pop rock vocal melody. It picks up and becomes pop-punk. It is very driving and has a great momentum. It also has some great synth effects in the background. But where “Pitchfork” is simple and repetitive, this song is more detailed and complex. The verse builds extremely well into the chorus delivery.
“Hillbilly Drummer Girl” is simple, vocal melody driven song that is part ballad, at least in comparison to the other songs here. Some of the vocal eccentricities remind me of the Ramones, as well as They Might Be Giants.
“Whirlpool” this song is more meandering, like their previous album’s material. It kinda floats by without shape or structure. The chorus is vague and does not really stand out, except for the fact that after it, the melody returns to the verse. His vocals here are a little reminiscent of Apples In Stereo.
“Once In A While” starts with fuzzy guitars and picks up the melody with calm smooth vocals, again similar to Apples in Stereo. It ends with an odd, chaotic drum fill, completed with a last loud strum.
“The Teen Thing” is a parody of any oldie from 1950. It reminds me of That Thing You Do, but a little less catchy, and much less produced.

On “Thirsty” I’m immediately reminded of Apples in Stereo again. The song structure is identical and the vocal melody is the same. There is even a backwards, psychedelic section that changes things up a bit from the norm.
“Fear Bitterness and Hatred” has a loud, rocking Dinosaur Jr. esq beginning. From there, it is not as quirky as Dino Jr. It is not as catchy as the rest of the album, as the melody does not flow into catchiness as you can hear on the other melodies. This is a more alternative, guitar based song.
“Hard To Mention” starts off right away with a Buzzcocks style electric guitar hook. And from there the guitar chugs along behind quiet, calm loving pop lyrics. The guitar returns for the instrumental bridge. It ends with 20 seconds to spare, where there is a weird song bit, almost as if they recorded it over a different song, and just left the ending there.
“Tomorrow's Gone (And So Are You)” begins very metal-ish, but then the vocals soften it up with their light, nasally polite cadence. The song is fast paced, but the vocals provide the perfect balance to the loud music. The vocals remind me of the previously reviews Fabulous Fondas as well. The chours is a good bit of call and response vocals from a shouting choir behind the lead vocals.
“Evening” is a concert opening song, with a dark, marching beat and metal lead guitar stunts. This would be more character on Totally Lost, rather than here, but it just shows that they still have that part to their music repertoire. On some of the verse sections, he changes it up and sings smoothly, but the majority it is the spoken/sung genre of singing. It ends with heavy guitar chugging suddenly.
“There's A Love” has a whiny electric wha-wha guitar introduction. But the song simplifies itself and transforms into a new wave ballad with monotone vocals and the whiny guitar chugging along too. Toward the end of the song, the lead guitar overtakes the wha-wha rhythm guitar and goes off on a shredding spree.
“Swiftly But Gently” is a nice middle level song, part shoe-gazing pop, part rock with monotone smooth repetitive vocals with a simple melody that is like a children’s nursery rhyme.

Stand Out Tracks: ~Picky Piggy
*Looking Around

Links:

Monday, November 10, 2008

(the) Mighty Lemon Drops - Laughter~ / Sound*

Name: (the) Mighty Lemon Drops
Album: Laughter~, Sound*
Year: 1989~, 1991*
Style: Brit-Pop
Similar Bands: Midnight Oil, INXS, The Alarm, Lilac Time
"One-Word" Review: Reliable-Pop
Based Out Of: UK
Label: Sire, Reprise, Warner
Laughter - Cover & Back & CD

Laughter - Interior & Liner Notes
Sound- Cover & Tape
Sound - Interior & Tape
Laughter (1989)~
  1. At Midnight 4:29
  2. Into the Heart of Love 2:56
  3. Where Do We Go From Heaven 5:41
  4. The Heartbreak Thing 6:18
  5. One in a Million 4:37
  6. Written In Fiction 3:35
  7. Th Real World 5:53
  8. All That I Can Do 4:32
  9. Second Time Around 3:53
  10. Beautiful Shame 3:31
  11. Rumbletrain? 5:15
Sound (1991)*
  1. Too High 3:48
  2. Unkind 2:36
  3. My Shadow Girl 3:20
  4. Marry's Poem 1:29
  5. Always 5:34/
  6. Big Surprise 3:47
  7. Cold, Cold Heart 4:01
  8. Annabelle 3:12
  9. You Don't Appreciate Anything 4:01
  10. Colorful-Loving-Me 4:50
  11. Ready, Steady, No! 2:45
Album Rating (1-10):~Laughter: 7.0
*Sound: 8.0

Members & Other Bands:Paul Marsh - Lead & Backing Vox (Active Restraint)~*
David Newton - Electric & Acoustic Guitars, vox (Active Restraint , The Wild Flowers, Revolux, Fonda)~*Auto-Harp,Keys*
Marcus Williams - Bass, vox~* Vibraphone*
Keith Rowley - Drums~*
Tony Linehan - Bass (Active Restraint)~
Stevie Lang - vox~
Rich E. - vox~
Ian Devaney - Brass~
Andy Morris - Brass~
Alex White - Keyboards~
Louis Jardim - Percussion~
Mark Wallis - Produced & Engineered~
Richard Evans - Asst. & Tape Jockey~
Tim Palmer - Producer~
Simon Vinestock - Engineer, Producer~
Sven Taits - Engineer~
Karl - Asst Engineer~
Simon Fowler - Photography~
Mick Lowe - Sleeve Design~
Simon Esplen - Sermon Management~*
Cerne Canning - Sermon Management~*
Andy Paley - Producer, Percussion, Keys,Harmonica, Auto-Harp*
Mark Linett - Record*
Rooster Cosby - Percussion*
Angelo Bruschini - Guitar*
Pete Peck - Asst*
Sarah - Asst*
Greg Jakobok - Sleeve*

Unknown-ness: I picked these albums up some years ago, although I do not remember how or when. Going through my CDS, I saw Laughter, and knew that I had a tape of their too, but I don’t think I ever listened to either. I know they were part of the twee- British movement in the late 80’s early 90’s, but I don’t really know their sound or them at all. Perhaps I heard of them through NME back in the early Blur following days, and got their albums through association…but again, there is no way to be sure.

Album Review: Laughter~The album starts off with “At Midnight.” Swirling electric echoes resonate and increase in volume. Drums kick in and march us through a foggy evening, representative of the track’s name. The vocal style is similar to Midnight Oil, and jangley guitars lighten them mood. The power behind the song makes it very anthemic. “Into the Heart of Love” starts off with a catchy guitar hook, and basic radio friendly song-format. The chorus through the chorus feels like the chanting of Midnight Oil again, otherwise, the verse is similar to INXS. But it is another very powerful song. “Where Do We Go from Heaven” makes me think of the Smiths….granted, I don’t know much about the Smiths either, but this song has the usage of a downturned syllable at the chorus’s end; which comes off dark. I know Morrissey is fond of using this style in his music. The end of the song kinda breaks down and loses cohesiveness as the chorus echoes and the music stops. “The Heartbreak Thing” picks up with warmer jangley guitars and punchy drums. The chorus is a fun rising and falling of melody. Big, long musical breaks (and the harmonica) make the song drag along for quite a bit longer than it needs to be. “One in a Million” is a slow moving quiet song. I imagine this to be the song the band plays to begin after an encore. Just the singer comes out for the first two minutes, then the rest of the band kicks in with more energy, and the song comes to fruition. It rides back and forth in its quiet and loud moments, making for a great concert moment, drawing the crowd back into the show. “Written in Fiction” features loud guitars and a fun, vibrant “brass” section too. Here his voice is more Hutchinson in verse and more Garret in the chorus (INXS & Midnight Oil respectively). “The Real World” carries the same fun, upbeat vibe from the previous track. It is a little more rocking, but still very positive, and brings the brass back in the chorus. There is a very rocking guitar solo about 2.30 in. Then after a minute or repetitive chorus chanting, a little breakdown comes in, but it just reverts back to the same, unchanged place. The song ends in a fade out, but an unusual minute long acoustic “hidden track” finishes out the song on the CD. “All That I Can Do” comes rocking back with the same ingredients: guitars, solo, brass accents, and a driving melody. “Second Time Around” uh-oh...there must be a scratch along this track…cause it is not playing very well….OK…scanning ahead to about 1:30 in the song…This song makes me feel like listening to Lilac Time or the Three O’clock, both bands I like a lot. The chorus is really good, and the song is simple in a very good way. It is a shame about the scratch; I think this may be my favorite track. It takes a bit to end, and then “Beautiful Shame” takes over boldly. It starts off simple too, verse over simple bass and guitar, and a skipping drum beat. And the chorus is a layered vocal effect, giving the sound a strong thickness. “Rumbletrain?” oozes the exact feeling of that image from the start of the chugging guitar and sliding sound of sawing strings. INXS vocals begin in this stomping, moving song. It sounds like a simple song, without many complicated parts, so it is simple in a bad way this time. Just as you think it is going to end early, it comes back loudly at first, and settles back into the same tired chorus. A bunch of soaring sound effects, talking, lead guitar and the steady drum & bass beat wind down the album, ending in a full on-stop.

Sound* “Too High” starts off the album with a chorus of church bells, then electric guitars kick in followed shortly with the drums. There is more raw, electric energy on the first few seconds of this song than on all of Laughter. It is a very catchy song, with fast vocals, that end with the title echoed over and over again. It winds down slowly, with more phantom vocals underplayed in the background. And a single bell (accompanied by a zoob-tube) ends the track. “Unkind” is a fast paced 60’s pop number. It is very catchy, straight forward track, with perfectly layered chord changes, and melodic vocals. And the song ends with a flurry of drums and repetitive vocals. “My Shadow Girl” is a 60’s psychedelic song. You can hear the wavering in his voice as he sings the word girl. The song is electrified with loud and heavy guitars at points, but over-all, it maintains the psych-effect. For all intent purposes, the song ends a minute before the track is done, and the song is jammed out on for another minute with heavy bass and electric guitars. “Marry's Poem” begins with electric sound effects, a catchy, jittery bass groove, xylophone and choral vocals in the background. It ends abruptly after a minute and a half with a kind of digital manual stop, and “Always” picks up after a count off. The tempo of the song is changing landscape. The loud and heavy chorus makes me think of a cheery Ned’s Atomic Dustbin. And the bare bones verse relies on the melody of the words. Without being too generic, this is a very British sounding song from the early 90’s Brit Pop era.

Side 2 begins with “Big Surprise;” a drums and dancy bass driven brit-pop song. The chorus again harkens back to the notion of 60’s psych hidden under the grandeur of 90’s production. It even reminds me a little of Game Theory. The song continues to end and restart, until it hits the psych heavy repetitive ending, which fades out and back in just when you expect it to be over. “Cold, Cold Heart” is a honky-tonk, bluesy song, set off with parallel harmonica and bass lines. This is the most INXS song on the album. It is a little long and repetitive for its own good, though. “Annabelle” (not related to the amazingly awesome Hail Social song by the same name) brings us back to the catchy 60’s jangley pop number. The pace, strength, and catchiness of this song in all its little sections make it stand out as the best track here. The bridge builds so amazingly in anticipation to the chorus of the drawn out crooning of the “Annabelle,” that you cannot wait for its delivery. “You Don't Appreciate Anything” features bass only, shortly followed by drums, and then typical shoe-gazer style guitars. This song feels like all the energy was drained out from the previous song. It is a head nodding tune, a ballad in its nature, hidden under brit-pop production. “Colorful-Loving-Me” is a throwback to their earlier material. It has a familiar guitar sound if you’re a Smiths fan (I think), and is more anthemic than anything else on the album. Its steady march goes on and on, well past its welcome. “Ready, Steady, No!” is the final statement from the band, heavy on the bouncy country bass. It fits in with “Cold Cold Heart” very well, but as a way to end the album, it feels like a poor representation. And the album ends with a fade out.

The evolution is somewhat in reverse when comparing these two albums in time line history with many other bands. Sound, the later release, is a much harder record than the previous Laughter. Perhaps it was just the style of production at those two times, but The Mighty Lemon Drops do both styles very well. They maintain their similarities to INXS through out both records (mostly in vocal style). They were a solid, reliable band, and I hope to pick up some more of their material if I see it in the used and discount bins along my travels.

Stand-Out Track:
~Second Time Around
*Annabelle

Links:
Mighty Lemon Drops - Wikipedia
Mighty Lemon Drops - Myspace
Mighty Lemon Drops - Allmusic
Mighty Lemon Drops - In Everything You Do - Archive
Mighty Lemon Drops - Trouser press
Mighty Lemon Drops - Last FM

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Birdland - s/t

Name: Birdland
Album: s/t
Year: 1991
Style: Dirty Brit-Pop
Similar Bands: Primal Scream, Jesus & Mary Chain, Stone Roses, Psychedelic Furs
"One Word" Review: Fuzzy-Brit-Rock
Based Out Of: Birmingham, UK
Label: Radioactive Records, MCA, UNI Distribution Corp.
Birdland Image on Tape Cover (by Tom Sheehan)
Birdland Image inside tape (by Kevin Westenberg)
Birdland Liner Notes & Tape (by Tim Paton)
Birdland (1991)
  1. Shoot You Down (3:12) (youtube video)
  2. Sleep With Me (3:50) (youtube video)
  3. Don't Look Back (4:58)
  4. Paradise (2:35)
  5. Wake Up Dreaming (2:37)
  6. Rock N Roll Nigger (6:27)/
  7. Everybody Needs Somebody (3:42)
  8. Letter You Know (4:09)
  9. Beat Me Like A Star (4:11)
  10. She Belongs To Me (3:32)
  11. Hollow Heart (2:19) (youtube video)
  12. Exit (5:42)
Album Rating (1-10):
7.0

Band Members & Other Bands:
Robert Vincent- vox (Zodiac Motel, Torn Bloody Poetry)
Lee Vincent - guitars (Zodiac Motel, Capriccio, Psychic Drive)
Simon (Syd) Rodgers - Bass
Neil Hughes - Drums
Gene Kale - Drums (Zodiac Motel)
Philip Tennant - Producer & Engineer
Paul Sampson - Producer & Engineer
Wayne Morris - Executive Producer
Stephen Marcussen - Mastering
Ronald Morris - Management
Triad Artists - Agency
Vartan - Art Direction
Kosh Brooks Design - Design
Tom Sheehan - Cover
Kevin Westerburg - Studio Photo
Tim Paton - Beach Photo
Taki Ono - Japanese Tour Poster

Unknown-ness: This far removed from purchasing the tape, I do not remember how I heard of Birdland, or why I bought the tape. I can only guess that I heard one of their songs somewhere...most likely on a CMJ Music Monthly compilation, and soon after, I saw this tape for sale. It has been a very long time since I heard the tape, so I forgot what to expect. So, based on the look of the young blond kids wrapped up in the US flag, I was expecting some kind of angsty Brit-Pop. The inside image reminds me of Suede, so I was ready for a thick, dreamy sound.

Album Review: The album has all the fuzz and catchy rock hooks to make them a clear contender for dictionary definition for a 90's Brit-pop band. The first song, "Shoot You Down" feels so very familiar, I think it sounds like Psychedelic Fur's "Pretty In Pink." It has a very catchy chorus of "Shoot You Down" plus a great earlier, fake chorus of "Waiting For You" which is sung along the same melodic line. It has a great build up going into the chorus, and it lets you down gently. The thick sounding guitar, and quick paced, call back vocals make this a true anthemic pop single. Track 2, "Sleep With Me" presents its poppy-hook with a combination of the bass + guitar interacting and guiding each other. The chorus reminds me of a lighter version of a Sex Pistols song. At the same time, it feels like a modernized, fuzzed-out oldie. The song ends in an exhausted whoosh. "Don't Look Back" has a driving drum beat, and shady-sly British vocals. The chorus is a repetitive chant of the title. The song builds with aggression to near shouting, elements that make punk exciting, but this still comes off as rock. As it ends, everything builds louder musically then completely shuts-down. A quick fade in and out fuzz-guitar teaser comes and goes, and the next song is off and running. "Paradise" is another quick paced song. The bass & drum track carry it along with the all-too familiar British (pseudo punk) rock melodies creating the hooks, along with Bap Bap Bada-Bada's. "Wake up Dreaming" is a song seeped in that alternative guitar sound that sounds as if its being played inside a steel drum. The main chanted chorus is repeated relentlessly "if I see that girl tonight." Rock N' Roll Nigger (apparently a Patti Smith cover) begins as a slow anthemic drudging march. It picks up a with bouncy guitar, and quickened drum pace, and launches into an angry speed ballad, shouting the lyrics, almost unintelligibly. Throw in the guitar solo, and you've completed your criteria for a ballad.

Side 2 starts with a Futureheads sounding intro, until the Psych Furs guitars pick up, and the gruff & choppy, pseudo-punk vocals come in. The chorus melody of "Everybody Needs Somebody" is quite catchy, and as in all the songs, simple and repetitive. The singer shows a very interesting break in his normal vocal caricature in the follow-up phrase 'What did you do to her?,' specifically in the word 'Do.' It is a cute almost pubescent squeak, which adds depth which was not there before. "Letter to You" starts out as a boring alternative throw-away song, better suited for the Gin Blossoms. The chorus is not bad, but it does not fit on the album with its lack of quality. A spacey, echo-guitar loop starts "Beat Me Like A Star." It picks up on powerful anthemic qualities in its declaration throughout. The tempo slows down mid-song, re-evaluating itself, and then marches back into the proud verse and chorus combo. It ends with the repetitive chanting 'I'm Coming On' and the guitar quietly slinks away to end it. "She Belongs to Me" is a quick paced pop song, set in motion with the loud guitar hook that repeats a couple of times through out the song. The jealous tone of the song's lyrics is not echoed in its delivery. Instead the singer sounds like he is just happy to be with the girl, rather than feeling threatened by other guys. "Hollow Heart" is an extremely fast, quick pop-punk number. It loops itself up and down along its 3-chord musical scale. The final song begins like a Ted Leo number. The mix of slight Irish music with rock. It then becomes a jangly rock number, same familiar sounding alternative guitar, and a spoken word-like verse. The song then morphs into a U2 song. The chorus is very good: "We were so wild that year." It is a short chorus, but very catchy, and the music is built up all around it, as if that line alone was to be placed on a pedestal.

The album is very solid. All the songs are very listenable, and with the one exception, very cohesive. It has the dirty club rock sound and fuzz that was very popular in the early 90's, where sloppy play was the norm. It is a shame, having read their history, that their career fizzled out before it really took off. Such is life for some unfortunate bands.

"Stand Out" Track: