The Young Veins “Take A Vacation” Deluxe Edition
One day Ryan Ross and Jon Walker (Panic at the Disco) decided to embrace sunny harmonies and chiming Rickenbackers straight out of the mid 60’s playbook. The Young Veins crib from The Beatles, Kinks, Zombies and The Dave Clark Five – and it makes great classic rock listening from beginning to end. And while LP did come out in 2010, the new deluxe edition is out now and includes 6 additional songs previously unavailable.
“Change” jumps out with those great riffs and a chugging chorus that sticks in your head. The feel-good vibe leads the Kinks-like title track, and “Caper Town” is a big Beatles meets Phil Spector number with the most memorable melody here. “Maybe I Will, Maybe I Won’t” is dead-on Ray Davies imitation and most tracks stick to under 3 minutes. Added standouts include “The Other Girl” with its layered instrumentation, and the skiffle rant “Security.” While other critics might call out the blatant retro worship, the songwriting keeps it original and entertaining. Personally, I’m thrilled anyone under 30 is into this style rock and roll. Overall highly recommended.
The John Sally Ride “Nothing Doing”
The combo of John Dunbar (Vocals), Sal Maida (Bass) and Sal Nunziato (Drums) are The John Sally Ride, and their sophomore LP raises the bar. The band has more confidence and play tightly composed songs that are designed to stick in your brain. The band’s style reminded me of Glenn Tilbrook and/or Squeeze with just a touch of Wilco.
It starts out simple enough with the jangling melody of “Embarrassingly Single” leading to a great middle eight. Often its a word couplet like on “Consider It Considered” or the title track where John sings “I’m nothing with you, but nothing without you.” The biographical “Watching Fingers” is another gem about getting hooked playing guitar and “All or Something” is another keeper. Overall, no filler and this would have found a place in my top 25 last year. Highly Recommended.