Urge Overkill and Tom Shotton

Urge Overkill

Urge Overkill “Oui”

Urge Overkill, led by Eddie “King” Roeser and Nash Kato, are two Minnesota native sons who took their name from a Parliament song, formed in 1984. The band occupied a unique space in the music universe; combining elements of arena rock, power pop, and grunge, they never neatly fit in a single genre. Their cover of Neil Diamond’s “Girl, You’ll Be a Woman Soon” was used in Pulp Fiction and got them on the map nationally in 1992. The follow-up album Saturation brought hits “Sister Havana” and “Positive Bleeding” to radio airwaves, but the band couldn’t capitalize and split up after a few years. They reunited 16 years later, with the impressive Rock and Roll Submarine, a nice return to form. Roeser and Kato continue to prove to be survivors with Oui ten years later.

An unexpected cover of Wham’s “Freedom” leads, and it’s wonderfully suited to these times as the duo makes it their own. The riffs are just as sharp, but the band’s younger swagger has been replaced with the grizzled wisdom of age. While the melodic content is understated, it still comes across on “A Necessary Evil” and the riff-heavy “Follow My Shadow.” Instrumentally and lyrically the band still has the chops that moved fans with “How Sweet The Light.”  The anthemic heavier rockers that tell a more complex story are good (“Litany,” “Prisoner’s Dilemma”) but it’s not balanced by anything lighter. Overall a good album that continues the UO comeback story. Definitely check it out.

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Tom Shotton

Tom Shotton “Forever Home”

Another one from last year that slipped by me, Shotton’s a fine talent from South London singing and songwriting in the mold of Harry Nilsson and early 80’s Paul McCartney. This album hasn’t gotten the attention it deserved, and with his earnest vocal, he breezes by the gorgeous chorus on the piano pop of “Hold On To The Best Times,” and “Back Home” is another contemporary pop melody that darkly references “Dancing in the Street.”

Another melodic gem is the gentle “Hear the Babies Talking” with its shifting chords, layered harmonies, and jazz sax. The album’s centerpiece is a dour ballad “What Becomes of The Broken Hearts,” a dramatic cry for help that goes on a bit long at over six minutes. And in a directly opposite mood comes, “Oh Angelina!” a bouncy theme worthy of an 80’s TV sitcom, and here the horns dominate. The songs lose steam after this, but Shotton has proven that he can write catchy melodies that resonate. Overall a great first impression, and music that deserves to be heard.

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