Thanks to the folks at Lojinx, they are offering a FREE mini-album of exclusive Christmas songs by Farrah, Henrik, The Wellingtons, Caroline Lost, Nate Company, The Bad Machines & Nightlights.There are seven new songs from seven different artists on the Lojinx roster especially recorded for this release. There’s sure to be something you’ll enjoy!
Delaware native Steve Chesser has put together a group of songs he describes as “anatomically correct indie pop.” It started as a group of home-grown demos and they are gathered here. The album starts out exceptionally strong with “Anyway, Anyhow” and one can compare the skilled melodies with multi-part guitars to Jeff Murphy or Todd Rundgren. The song tempo speeds up for the excellent “Dead Inside” which is the catchiest song about nihilism I’ve heard since Nillson’s “One” that isn’t a ballad. The guitar work and harmonies are beautifully composed and performed. “Fool” adds a slightly harder edge, and the juxtaposed guitar and vocals on “What Comes Around” are incredible, kind of like if Dave Grohl joined Sugar Ray, instead of Foo Fighters. The mid tempo ballad “The Day You Left” is another standout (although the metronome beat is annoying). Towards the latter end of the album the tone starts to change to more conventional jangle pop, this starts on “Evermore” and continues through “Some Say” where REM and Sebadoh’s DIY feel start to dominate the sound. Chesser also did everything here, all the instruments, recording and engineering. And that is my only pet peeve here, this album would be truly great if a top notch pop producer, like Jason Falkner got a hold of these tracks. The songs are too good for the lo-fi auteur approach. Don’t let that prevent you from hearing this though. Fans of REM, Shoes, and Smog will love this.
If you could picture the perfect bar band – does a mix of The Replacements and Cheap Trick sound right to you? Well, The Respectables, (Nick Piunti, Joey Gaydos, and Donn Deniston) cover that ground pretty well. The CD starts with the rocker “Charged By The Minute” and it has the piss and sweat pouring out of these guys like classic ‘Mats. This is high powered pop in Detroit “Motor City” style all through it’s 11 tracks. Lead vocalist Nick Piunti recalls a mix of Ryan Adams and Mike Viola. “Could It Be” states “it seems like I know you” with a simple riff and beat track that is both familiar and new at the same time. The Squeeze-like opening guitar jangle of “Spark & Destiny” is my favorite here only because it combines that style with a Tom Petty type of weariness. The group gets a little too cutesy with a bell in “From This Place” and a few tracks seem to coast on a single rhythm. But, you’ll hear nice detailed guitar work from lead Joey Gaydos, where he adds little flourishes to the arena rock sound. Overall an excellent album, if you like bands like The Romeo Flynns, Cheap Trick or The Vines. Very respectable company indeed.
This is pretty much a straight forward Christmas album with Weezer’s own signature sound attached to all the traditional songs like “We Wish You A Merry Christmas” and “O Holy Night”. I kind of expected some original holiday tunes with the standards, but sadly none were there. Rivers Cuomo and team Weezer do just about as good as the average Christian rock band with this material. So if you’re a Weezer fan, this is a nice present under the tree — and it mixes well with other groups holiday music just fine thank you. Personally, I’m tired of “Pork and Beans.”
Graham Day (The Prisoners, Prime Movers, The Solar Flares) and The Gaolers put out great classic garage with a modern punk appeal. They hailed from the Medway Delta in England, and he Gaolers have the Eric Burdon and The Animals sound down pat on “Better Man.” This is pure gold for fans of the blue-eyed soul groups of the ’60s, like The Box Tops, and R&B rock of The Yardbirds. The White Stripes wishes they could sound this authentic and melodic as well. The rocking “Begging You” will get you moving from the opening piano and guitar riff. And the electric sitar/guitar combo of “Pass That Whiskey” is a great intro to a modern Raspberries-like melody. The aggressive “Wanna Smoke” is typical of the tunes here, with a driving beat and a snarl which has been perfectly captured in a simple arrangement. Yet Graham Day’s lyrics are completely legible and his vocals are tough, but not raspy (a common issue with retro beat bands). They also do a great job with the sound here, no overdone fuzztones or sonic distortions. Like in the the tune “Just A Song” Day sings “Don’t judge me/begrudge me, it’s just a song”- well it’s a damn fine song I’ll give you that. Place a copy of this with your early Who albums, or more recent bands like The Cynics and The Ugly Beats as one of the best in the genre.