Tristan Armstrong and The Campbell Apartment

Tristan Armstrong

Tristan Armstrong “The Lonely Avenue”

If first impressions are everything, then Ontario’s own Tristan Armstrong kicks down the door with a power pop punch on The Lonely Avenue. From the very first title track, it’s clear this isn’t some casual stroll—Armstrong is speeding down melody lane with the windows down and the volume cranked. Armstrong wears his influences like a badge of honor. We’re talking the cream of the crop: Pete Townshend’s swagger, Alex Chilton’s cool, Matthew Sweet’s melodic chops, and a touch of Redd Kross’s playful bite.

The slow ballad “Periscope” comes up next, and shows a pensive cool with a terrific blues guitar solo midway through. As a co-founder of the roots rock outfit The Actual Goners, he knows his way around a melody. Those Americana influences still peek through like an old friend, examples of this are “Sing In Your Sleep,” “The Lender,” and “Would You Take An IOU?” In addition his heart clearly beats to the rhythm of crunchy guitars and sugar-coated choruses here, shown in “Queen of Diamonds,” and the hook filled “On The Run.” Overall a refreshing mix of the melodic and mellow. Highly Recommended.

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The Campbell Apartment

The Campbell Apartment “(510)”

The Campbell Apartment, led by singer-songwriter Ari Vais, returns with their eighth album, (510)—a nod to his area code in Oakland, California. The album dives deep into themes of fatherhood, isolation, addiction, and love. The songs vary in style, from angry rock to trippy lightness.

Standout tracks include “30,000 Days,” an opener buzzing with garage-rock grit and a nostalgic, and “In My Dreams” has a catchy Lennon-esque vibe. The trippy “Ambulen” is another winner and “Tululah Says” delivers an infectious mix of punk and garage rock. Both “Grudge” and “Biter,” which lean into growling guitars and pounding percussion and radiate raw, primal energy, demonstrate Vais’s affection for Nirvana. The shimmering “What’s Goin On” starts with a ’60s pop-rock sweetness before shifting into a rugged garage-rock finish, but one of my favorites here is “Winter 2028,”which is similar to They Might Be Giants in political themed humor. (510) is a powerful demonstration of excellent songwriting and The Campbell Apartment’s persistent creative spark that is both raw and retro. Highly Recommended.

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