Pop Co-op and Buzz Clic Adventure

Pop Co-Op

Pop Co-Op “Suspension”

The quartet of Steve Stoeckel (Spongetones), Bruce Gordon, Stacy Carson, and Joel Tinnel continue the experiment known as Pop Co-Op. The flowing psych-pop of the opening title track “Suspension” is almost like a “loosen-up” session, and the single “I Just Love to Watch Her Dance” takes hold, with a delicate opening, and then launches into the fast-paced verses. The jangle and harmonies are lovely on “Air Heart” and euro-rhythmic “Out My Window” are early highlights.

The band tries a few different approaches to prevent predictability, and sometimes it doesn’t quite work (“Run and Hide”). But more often, the band hits the right notes, and the inventive “Unquestionably I-95,” Why Didn’t We?” and “Always In The Past” all channel the bandmembers frustrations with regrets and lost opportunities. The music succeeds on many levels and doesn’t always rely on those McCartney-like musings of age (“The Odd One.”) Overall, highly recommended.

Amazon | Kool Kat Musik


Buzz Clic Adventure with Phil Seymour

Buzz Clic Adventure with Phil Seymour “California”

Buzz Clic (aka  Elmer Charles Brandt Jr.) was a friend of the late great Phil Seymour (Dwight Twilley Band) and in 1991 the duo had a self-released album that remained a little-heard rarity. A few years later, Seymour died of cancer and this album was eventually released on Smog Veil Records, but again it disappeared. Thanks to the archival label Wizzard In Vinyl, the album is back with several bonus tracks.

Buzz adds his punk instrumentation to an overblown 90’s hair metal style on the opener “Lonely One,” and thankfully over the next several tracks more melodic tunes like “Sunsets In Blue” and “Baby Baby Baby” appear. Seymour seems to be having fun on the classic “Tallahassee Lassie” but most of the tracks are very average sounding or worse. The bonus tracks aren’t much better, even with Twilley guesting on “Don’t Lead Me On.”  Recommended for Seymour/Twilley completists only.

Amazon | Wizzard In Vinyl

Pop Co-Op and Dolph Chaney

Pop Co-Op

Pop Co-Op “Factory Settings”

Steve Stoeckel (The Spongetones) is back with his collaborative band The Pop Co-Op; Bruce Gordon (guitar and keyboards) Stacy Carson (drums) and Joel Tinnel (guitar). The fact that the band members record their parts miles away from each other matters not. Stoeckel’s unmistakable pop melody comes through on “No Man’s Land” an uncannily prescient song about the isolation that fits these times perfectly. And those harmonies! The pop gem “Kissing Katy” boasts some nice drum work, handclaps, and an acoustic guitar break. Next, “Flaws of Attraction” has a quirky story-song approach similar to They Might Be Giants and lots of neat harmonic contrast.

The jangling guitar riff, and bouncy tempo of “Catching Light” recalls XTC at their most buoyant. Other songs shift statistically, and “To the Sea” is a simple ballad with Stoeckel on the ukulele that suddenly enters deep psyche-pop territory before coming back. There is enough variation throughout the 14 tracks, so you will not be bored. Highlights include: “The Price of Admission,” “Sleeve” and the odd boogie-woogie “Won’t Be Me.”  Highly Recommended.

Amazon


Dolph Chaney “Rebuilding Permit”

Chicago songwriter Dolph Chaney starts his album with “I’m OK,” a bouncy affirmation that has a homespun quality similar in approach to Chris Breetveld, but with an underlying darkness. “If I Write It Down” also feels like a therapeutic exercise set to pop music, and it’s an emotionally honest, compelling song. “The Handling” is about handling a loved one’s death through the riffs of a guitar solo, and much of the remaining songs on the album are bleak.

Another standout here is the ballad “A Good Road Is Hard To Find” where the repeating acoustic riff feels like the hangover morning after an all-night bender. The bluesy solo here is a perfect fit too. While this might not be for everyone, the emotional journey is definitely worth the trip through the darkness. It’s music that deserves to be heard.

Amazon | Big Stir Records | Kool Kat Musik