July 1998 Reviews
RATING SYSTEM | Barry Adamson | Addict | The Aluminum Group | Baby Fox | Bicycle | The Brian Jonestown Massacre | The C60s | Dodge Minivans | High Art | The Mendoza Line | Parlour James | Pitchshifter | The Prissteens | The Queers | Rocket From the Crypt | 78s | Ramona Silver | Bunky Spurling | Stillpoint | Throttle
RATING SYSTEM:
= GODDAMN!!!
= EXCELLENT
= VERY GOOD
= GOOD
= FAIR
= SHITTY
BARRY ADAMSON - As Above, So Below (CD, Mute, Pop)
This is so cool. I guess I should have been familiar with the name Barry
Adamson before now, but I must admit my goddamn ignorance. Apparently
this fellow has previously produced mainly instrumentals, and this is his
first foray into the world of vocal music. If this is what his first try
sounds like, it'll be REAL interesting to hear his future recordings. For
lack of a better term, this is jazzy pop music...but don't let that scare
you away from this trippy CD. There's a peculiar, eerie feel to these tunes
that makes them rise above the medium. Barry came up with some of these
ideas while he was in the hospital awaiting surgery. He was obviously in
a bizarre frame of mind at the time. These compositions are dreamy and somewhat
distant. The production sounds more eighties than nineties...with more of
an analog than a digital sound. This sounds very different from other discs
coming out of late. And for that, Mr. Adamson gets bonus points. This is...excellent.
(Rating: 5)
ADDICT
- Stones (CD, Big Cat/V2, Pop)
They can play and sing, and the sound is that big, expensive nineties production
that we hear so much of these days. This London-based band has a very commercial,
radio friendly approach. The only area where they are weak is in song material.
None of these tunes stick in my head. What we have here is a collection
of semi-screamed anthemic pop that sounds like a thousand others. This isn't
terrible...it's just okay, sort of... Though this doesn't do it for me,
I've certainly heard a lot worse... (Rating: 2)
THE ALUMINUM GROUP - Plano (CD, Minty Fresh, Pop)
If you're still listening to the Pet Shop Boys or Erasure,
then you might as well slit your throat and drain away in the bathtub. The
Aluminum Group, though unashamedly commercial, is a talented new contender
in the field of soft pop. The band is led by brothers Frank and John
Navin, whose smooth vocals and easy listening tunes are as easy as cheese
on the eardrums. This is not synth pop, but rather muzak-ish easy listening
pop. These bright tunes are well arranged, orchestrated, and produced. Twelve
tunes including "Chocolates," "Sugar & Promises,"
and "Storytime." (Rating: 4)
BABY FOX
- Dum Dum Baby (CD, Roadrunner, Dub/pop/electronic)
The new disc by the peculiar yet critically acclaimed Baby Fox met
our plush offices with gushes of tension and excitement. The multitude of
reviewers all clamored for the disc, hoping to be the fortunate one who
would write the review. I was selected for the task for good cause, because
the last disc the band put out was on my master's top list. This British
trio's music is experimental dub/pop, and features some really cool production
tricks as well as inventive vocals. The best aspect of this band's music
is that they blend an odd hodge podge of styles into one big cohesive ball...and
make it all blend together like Sam's big ham sandwich on the wide open
ranger. This band's mesmerizing ability to use studio tricks to their advantage
is impressive indeed, particularly when the market is so overrun with folks
relying on technology to hide the fact that their music SUCKS. Baby Fox
music is truly great stuff. Includes "Dum Dum Baby," "Nearly
Beautiful," "Still Point," and "Naked Hour." (Rating:
5)
BICYCLE
- The Occupation of a Sand Dune (Independently released CD, Pop)
It seems incredible that there hasn't been a band named Bicycle before
now, but to my knowledge this is the first band to use the name. Better
yet, this is a GREAT obscure little pop band that you NEED to be aware of.
The music is production-heavy mental pop in the same vein as early 10CC.
The tunes are catchy, the arrangements way above average, and the vocals
KICK. This may very well be a hard one to come across, so your best bet
is to check out the band's web site at