Iain Hornal and Bhopal’s Flowers

Iain Hornal

Iain Hornal “Fly Away Home”

Iain Hornal, best known as a touring member of 10cc and Jeff Lynne’s ELO impressed me with an excellent debut, and 4 years later (and a lack of a tour for 2020) we have a follow-up. I have to say, when you play for the best rock pop bands some of that greatness will rub off, and fans will love the opener “Wake Me Up, Drop Me Out.” It first brings to mind classic Graham Gouldman, but entirely original; a solid melody with soothing slide guitar accents.

The swaying follow-up “Fly Away Home” is an uplifting tune that seems a perfect theme for a long plane trip. The melancholy ballad “How Much It Means” is a deeply emotional look back to a loved one’s passing. “Try A Little Love” is another winner, similar to Andrew Gold, the chorus bursts out with layered harmonies and hooks you immediately. Iain’s adult pop smartly touches a variety of styles, so it never gets predictable. However best songs are loaded in the first half, and a few songs get overly sentimental (“I Can’t Tell You”), but melodically it’s always on point. Ends with the understated acoustic charm of “Drop This Song.” Overall, this is a highly recommended gem.

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Bhopal’s Flowers

Bhopal’s Flowers “ALSTROEMERIA: A Journey On Earth & Beyond”

Bhopal’s Flowers is a new psyche-pop band and Alstroemeria is a psychedelic & conceptual record, mapping a 24 hours cycle, in which each song is linked to a specific time of the day/night. If you loved the Beatles’ “Love You To” then this is the album’s starting point. It opens with the fantastic “Enjoy Your Life On Earth,” a collection of Sitar rhythms and layered melody lines. “Napoleon Candy Sweet” adds handclaps and a hook-filled riff, try to imagine Kula Shaker with more of a power-pop sound.

This exclusive release from Kool Kat Musik recalls the 1960s psychedelia but not overtly so, and the trippy hippy elements don’t bury the melodies. The sitars have a hypnotic quality and the band’s style shifts enough to keep you engaged, like “Tomorrow’s Heroes” adds plenty of hooks to all that jangling guitar. This is a long player with 16 tracks, and while the sunshine is one half, the darker themes come out on the second half. Plenty of standouts here too, with “What About You” and the slinky “A Night At The Devachan.” High-quality arrangements are everywhere, and it ends with a cover of Cream’s “I Feel Free.” A MAJOR trip and Highly Recommended.

Kool Kat Musik

Rocket Bureau and The Dials

Steve Robinson

Rocket Bureau “Middle Angst”

A concept album born out of frustration, don’t let the quick punk opener “Disconnected” throw you off too much. Wisconsin’s Kyle Urban describes middle-age blues perfectly on several short bursts of power-pop energy. “Not You” and “Lipstick Queens” express the raw emotion, like “you’re no fun anymore.” The guitar acrobatics are quite impressive, but it gets better on “Summertime Crime,” a look back at those “wasted” years of youth and how it’s over. The tunes blend together seamlessly, fans of Cockeyed Ghost will really enjoy this album, especially “Something Wrong” which goes for the full Robert Pollard, loaded with layered riffs and an anthemic chorus.

“Bummer” continues our protagonist journey “what if you dropped everything, and let it shatter?” And the next several songs deal with a “sort of introspective hell” and it keeps the pedal to the floor on tone and tempo. Each short musical theme resonates, with “One For The Angels” and “Starlit Hotline” as standouts. While I enjoyed this album, it seemed a bit too long. Despite this pet peeve, it’s a very worthy musical ride that deserves to be heard.

Bandcamp only


The Dials

The Dials “And Another Thing .​.​. b​-​sides and asides”

The Dials are a British band that formed in 2002 whose music is a mixture of psychedelia, country, and rock. These are “B-sides” that never made previous albums, but the quality is really high. It starts with an excellent psychedelic groove “A Jigsaw Mind” and it seamlessly goes into “C.S.N.” which name drops legendary band’s Deja Vu, with an organ and acoustic guitar tribute. “Watch Her Walk Away” is another Byrdsian composition similar to “Eight Miles High.”

The songs then shift to a more folky direction with “Ford In The Road” and “Little Voices.” These mellow compositions give way to “Deep Blue Sea” a surf guitar lead gem that would make Dick Dale proud. A standout here is the music hall piano selection “The Station” with a terrific melody and middle eight. Then the band lets loose on the title track “And Another Thing,” and it rocks! The talent here is undeniable. Overall an enjoyable listen and should encourage you to invest in the band’s past “A” material.

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The Power Popaholic Interview with Eric Bazilian (The Hooters)

Eric Bazilian (The Hooters)

It’s been almost a year since my last interview, and I figured since everyone is using zoom anyway I will adopt my future interviews with artists by talking to them on camera. I came out from behind the microphone to interview Eric Bazilian singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, arranger, and producer, best known for being a founding member of the rock band The Hooters and for writing “One of Us,” made famous by Joan Osborne in 1995. He’s got some great new music that deserves to be heard. Check it out on Spotify:


Jay Gonzalez and The Krayolas

Jay Gonzalez

Jay Gonzalez “Back to the Hive”

Jay Gonzalez (Drive-by Truckers) returns with a second full-length solo album designed to sink into your head with simple, mellow pop melodies that recall the early ’70s AM radio. The instrumental opener “Sunspot” gives us a clue to the time period, and the title track “Back To The Hive” follows through with an easy-going strum. The country-folk love song “(I Wanna) Hold You” features inventive lyrics like “I wanna fold you up like origami.” Jay effectively mines all the influences and still makes these songs hook-filled gems.

Jay enlists Athens, GA friends like Chris Grehan, drummer Joe Rowe (The Glands), and former Drive-by Truckers Matt Lane (drums) and John Neff (pedal steel guitar.) The album’s second half gets a little more varied, with the terrific power-pop of “Need You Round,” and its double-tracked guitar and synths. The James Taylor-like ballad “Never Felt Bad (About Feeling Good)” evokes the same moods, and “Cryin’ Through The Wall,” a dramatic tribute to Robin Gibb is another winner. Highly Recommended.

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The Krayolas

The Krayolas “Savage Young Krayolas”

We’ve been advocates for The Krayolas for a long time, and this newly re-mixed and re-mastered collection stands as proof that these Tex-Mex Beatles have the goods. These Chicano garage rockers from San Antonio rock right out of the box with the first three songs “Aw Tonight,” “You’re Not My Girl,” and “Roadrunner.” The energy and hooks are heavily influenced by the Dave Clark Five, Duane Eddy, and The Kinks (a cover of “You Really Got Me” is here too).

The band offers versatility with the Merseybeat “All I Do Is Try,” and the garage stomper “Gator Gator.” The harmony-filled “Sunny Day” compares favorably to The Beach Boys! The appealing melodies are so crisp, and if this is your first taste of The Krayolas you can look further into their catalog starting with Best Riffs Only’.This is super highly recommended and stands as one of the best archival releases of 2020.

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EP and Singles Potpourri: Sandy McKnight, Beebe Gallini, Brad Marino, Vanilla, Jon Klages, Barton Hartshorn

Sandy McKnight‘s follow-up to last year’s San Fernando Beat EP continues his string of “shoulda-been” hit songs with Fernando Perdomo. If you’re looking for DIY rock and roll, look no further than Beebe Gallini and Brad Marino. Beebe’s got a rough garage sound, but it’s chock full of hooks, and Brad’s sound is vintage gold, similar to The Rolling Stones.  Going back in time further, Vanilla ’66 is an instrumental album for a 1960’s movie that never existed, retro pop fans can bask in the fluorescent glow of nostalgia. Will there be another Austin Powers movie? We got the soundtrack.

Jon Klages new single “1133 Ave. of the Americas (For Enoch Light),” is a subtle jazzy tribute to his grandfather, akin to Harry Nilsson in its brilliant simplicity and a great mood setter. UK artist Barton Hartshorn has a new single, “Listen For A Change,” and it recalls Prefab Sprout and early Style Council. Very nice.