Splurge "The Cure for the Cure"


Splurge are a pop-folk-rock group from Australia with a laid back approach. They are a little hard to pin down as far as category actually. They have mid-tempo beats and steady rhythm guitars with melodic wailing vocals. The opener “When I Go To Sleep” is a bit like Coldplay meets Aztec Camera. “She’s Not the One” is another good song doing an Echo & The Bunnymen vibe with some synth and guitar. Sometimes the laid back guitar works well – the song “Beautiful” is better than any James Blunt trash. Greg Williams vocals do a serviceable job, but sometimes a bit too breathy for me. “Too much is not enough” is one of the few great rockers here, and the entire album could have used more of this. Several songs toward the end of the album, drift along on a lazy psychedelic vibe and at over four minutes for each track, could put you to sleep. The exception is “Numb” a nice Pulp-styled ballad with dramatic flair. Also the title track “The Cure for the cure” is a good track too, if a bit overindulgent. Overall the melodies are excellent, and this is a highly recommended CD. Listen for yourself on the MySpace site.

Splurge Website | MySpace | Not Lame | Jam Recordings | CD Baby

The Ugly Beats "Take a Stand with the Ugly Beats"

If you liked “The Go” – who I reviewed last week, you’ll also love The Ugly Beats. This Austin, TX based garage band nails the early Kinks and let’s loose with tons of new Nuggets that would fit with any 60’s inspired collection. Oh those riffs! It starts off with the tune “Take A Stand” with plenty of mod flavor. It continues with the excellent “Bring her down” and “Million Dollar Man” which mines the sound made popular by the early 60’s Who and the Easybeats. If you go for this sound, The Ugly Beats are a “must have” group with great guitar work, and unfortunately for Rainbow Quartz, they are only available on Get Hip Records. “I’m gonna break her heart” reminds me of another similar current favorite – The Gripweeds. “Action Plus” is an awesome instrumental, that is catchy as it is retro. Unlike the Go or The Asteriod Four and other garage revival bands, the vocals are not rough and scratchy, but melodic and clean-sounding, like Colin Blunstone of the Zombies. I do not expect a cover of “Louie Louie” anytime soon, however “Let me through” comes off like a Troggs update. This is a great album for a summer drive and has no filler – even the mid-tempo “Ain’t that old” has a little early Dylan vibe with that farfisa organ.

Ugly Beats Website | MySpace | Get Hip Records

The Pigs "Oink"

Sounding alot like The Cars meets Enuff Znuff – The Pigs new album “Oink” features Geoff Westen, a dead-ringer vocally for Ric Ocasek. The songwriting and instrumentation are equally good – each song has a tight arrangement that possesses catchy guitar and synth keyboard riffs. “Satyurday Night” sounds like it fell off the Cars’ “Heartbeat City” album. The production is sleek and clean, especially nice is the tune “Heartbreak Street” which sounds like a Todd Rundgren-styled tune that borrows a bit from his “Healing” era. This fits really well, as Todd himself is now the leader of the New Cars and there is an overlap of influences. Alot of nice synth work and guitar on “Doesn’t Anyone?” a catchy tune which asks the listener “Doesn’t anyone love me tonight?” “Beat me up” has a rotating chorus that allows for some nice solo guitar work. The album includes two bonus tracks – alternate versions of “Heartbreak Street” and “Saturday Night” The group is a talented bunch and if you harbor any love of 80’s era rock and roll you will want to pick this album up. There are no real weak tracks on the album and after a few listens this will become a favorite!

The Pigs website | CD Baby | MySpace | Not Lame

The Orion Experience "Cosmicandy"

If you’d like a fun album, you couldn’t do better than The Orion Experience. It starts off with a bouncy dance pop song “The Queen of White Lies” that mines a bit of the neo disco trend made popular by Mika and Scissor Sisters. It’s also followed by the Reggae-beat tune “Obsessed With You” and I thought this dance-styled pop would continue, but slowly the album begins to transform. At the midpoint the power pop begins to show itself, the tune “Adrianne” is a great little gem with hand claps and vocals from both Orion Simprini and Linda Horwatt that makes this track shine like a long lost B-52’s single. And the entire album starts to get better. The band sounds tighter and the melodies shine right through. “There’s no Love in Februray” and “Your New Boyfriend” are great songs comparable to Fountains of Wayne-styled pop. “We are the Ones” is a classic anthem for the younger generation and it ends off with the amazing “Blood & Money” – a great rant type of song that owes alot to Dire Strait’s “Industrial Disease.” Although the more commercial dance tracks on the albums first half are good, the songs on the second half are worth the purchase and shouldn’t be missed.

The Orion Experience website | CD Baby | MySpace | Not Lame

Grand Atlantic "This is Grand Atlantic"


With an orchestral magnificence not heard since Brian Wilson’s Smile and a brashness not heard since the earlier albums of Oasis, I present to you Grand Atlantic. Hailing from Brisbane, Australia – and lead by Phil Usher’s gritty vocals, Grand Atlantic is everything a power pop fan could want and bands like Travis or Coldplay wish they could become. It starts off with the dramatic piano melody in “Prelude” and fades into the blistering single “Coolite” – the type of great song only Oasis used to be able to pull off. The album continues with tastey guitar riffs in “Smokle and Mirrors” a great single and my favorite tune on the CD. Things get a little trippy on the Beatles’ “Rain” inspired track “Chaos Theory” and then with the next track “Wonderful Tragedy” resembles a classic SuperDrag track with a touch of Beach Boys “Pet Sounds.” Another gem is the low key “Slappin’ On The Cuffs” that often recalls classic Teenage Fanclub a little bit. The group does an excellent job of using the best elements of classic 60s pop and creating something new and catchy, like the horn flourishes in “Burning Brighter.” Another band that draws similar comparison here is The New Pornographers, and every track here is impressive. Even the last track “Peace be with you” is awesome, using french horn, harpsichord, sleigh bells, wood blocks, hand claps, timpani, cymbals, tambourine, string quartet, and everything short of the kitchen sink! The Beach Boys-like coda at the end of the album is not to be missed either. Bottom line, this is an amazingly great album and deserves much acclaim. On my top ten for 2007, most definitely.

Grand Atlantic’s website | MySpace | CD Baby | Not Lame | Kool Kat