Spain Colored Orange and La Snacks


Spain Colored Orange “Sneaky Like A Villain”
Opening with a lovely harmony-filled intro, The Spain Colored Orange are a Houston Texas group with an affection for all kinds of music from The Beatles to Radiohead. Lead by trumpet player Eric Jackson, and lead singer Gilbert Alfaro, “Who Am I?” is psyche pop with jazz touches here and there and the tone shifts around making it impossible to pigeonhole the band, but it does remind me of Camper Van Beethoven. “Hide” is lead by synths, beats and Gilbert’s sleepy vocal. Pop fans will enjoy the highlight tune “Cheap Thrills” – full of playful piano and so many melodic changes, you’d swear it’s Bryan Scary. The band is fearless, and it’s quirky shifts in tone and tempo can be very challenging to sit through. Buried through this are some hooks, like “Better Left Alone” is like synth and horn heavy High Llamas. Musical nods to XTC are on “Birds and Bees” and Syd Barrett-era Pink Floyd on “Uh, Oh Trouble” each with a horn solo. But as often as it succeeds, it also fails to salvage songs that cannot decide where to go like “You Think You Know” and the dreadful “Better Left Alone.” I would recommend this to diehard psyche-pop fans who are into a musical melange. Very much like a fried egg and peanut butter sandwich, it’s definitely an acquired taste.

My Space | CD Baby


La Snacks “New Fangled” EP

Another Texas band that has a laid back indie pop style. They have been compared to such indie luminaries as Archers of Loaf, The Hold Steady and Pavement. The opener “Kristin Was A Meterorologist” is a like Lou Reed fronting for The Cure, with strange lyrics about Neville Chamberlain and Nazi appeasment. There is more political wierdness with “Jackson 88” but the band keeps the beat going and at least the songs are likeable here. Fans of Weezer may enjoy the plodding “Devil has left The Building,” and pleasing “Oil and Water.” Frontman Robert Segovia’s off key vocals barely keep the whole thing together, but it works. This collection of warped, but tuneful indie rock will remind you of late ’90s college radio for sure.

My Space | CD Baby

Cheap Trick "The Latest" to come out 6/23

The boys from Rockford keep rocking. The veteran rock group will start taking pre-orders for the 13-track set, which it recorded during the past year mostly in Los Angeles with producer Julian Raymond, on Friday via its official web site, www.cheaptrick.com, and at Amazon.com. Those who pre-order will receive “The Latest” on June 23, 2009.

Greg Pope "Pete" EP and interview

Greg Pope had arguably the best power pop album last year with Pop Monster. Well, the follow up is finally here with the “Pete” EP. And like Pop Monster it still has those wonderful layers upon layers of heavy guitar, evidenced by the opener “Fall into Your Arms.” The melodies continue to evoke Badfinger, The Who, Led Zepplin, Guided By Voices and his last band, Edmund’s Crown. With the next song “Help Yourself” it continues the melodic guitar assault. “How Do You Do It” has a 70’s-era bass line mixed with a funky rhythm. The big melodic single “Roll With It” is very much in the Emitt Rhodes mold with a dash of Pope’s multi-layered Beatle touches in the chorus, and even the “Lady Madonna” bassline. “Let it Roll Off” has a gentle country strum and bouncy rhythm. Even the ending track “In My Head” does exactly what the title says, and remains “in your head” long after the song ends with a looping Zepplin riff. I could be picky and mention that the vocals are a bit overshadowed by the guitar work, so figuring out the lyrics aren’t that easy. The fact remains that every song here is simply brilliant and I am ready blast this music on my car stereo this summer. In other words, Pete is most worthy follow up to Pop Monster —  and just as impressive. I don’t really rate EPs in a top ten at the end of the year, but I’m ready to declare this the best EP I’ve heard so far.

My Space | CD Baby | Not Lame

PETE – Greg Pope

I decided to strike while the EP was hot off the presses and interview Greg about his solo career and the future of Edmunds Crown. Read the interview here or click the Artists Interviews button on the right.

Charlotte Pop Fest – Sept. 24-27, 2009

This is going to be the biggest power pop show of the year. After last year’s success James Deem has stocked this 2nd annual event with even bigger bands. In fact you will probably not see this many stars in one festival.

The first day, Thursday – The Posies will make a rare concert appearance and only one night. Only 100 tickets will be sold for this intimate performance.


On Friday, The Spongetones will headline, along with Bill Lloyd and others to be announced. The rest of the weekend is chock full: The Singles, The Jellybricks, Myracle Brah (Andy Bopp), Starbelly, Cliff Hillis, Dennis Schocket, Ed James, Barry Holdship, Cool King Chris, gogoPilot, Michael Slawter, Tony Low and many more to be named.
GET YOUR TICKETS HERE!

All proceeds from Charlotte Pop Fest benefit The Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason & Science.

The Scared Cows and the groovy guru


Maxwell Smart and Agent 99 meet the Groovy Guru (played by Larry Storch of F-Troop) and the psychedelic group known as the Sacred Cows. Apparently that dippy hippy rock and roll was meant to brainwash teens to “Kill, Kill, Kill” and “bump off a square.” Well, maybe El Goodo could use those costumes for their next show?