The Dudes "Blood, Guts, Bruises, Cuts"

The Dudes are a Calgary band with a classic rock sound in the best sense. A bit like early Collective Soul mixed with Big Star, in other words – what rock and roll is supposed to sound like. With the first riffs of the opening track, “Honest Mistake” it will please fans right away, as lead singer Dan Vacon wears his soul on his sleeve. The next song “Girl Police” is a loving tribute to Cheap Trick in the opening notes and then piles on hook after hook. Vacon’s vocal delivery is a little like Queen with an Adam Levine (Maroon 5) styled twist. Another great tune is the narrative “Mr. Someone Else,” a snarky love letter to your best friend’s hot girlfriend. The albums theme of the hard time getting good lovin’ is both romantic and deeply cynical, but overall plenty of fun. Currently, the band is living up to the album title, by suffering a rash of injuries (Vacon broke his collarbone in a BMX accident, and his drummer Scott Ross lost some teeth on the same bike a week later). Some call this a “cursed” album because of the recent band accidents, but you can’t blame the music here. Most of the tracks are pretty solid and some tunes like the mid-tempo “Petty Lies” are almost poised to break into a standout chorus, but just don’t quiet get there. Overall a pretty good driving album with enough diversity in the track list to ensure repeat listens.

Bandcamp | MySpace | Amazon

Other top tens and goodbye to 2009

Get a gander at some other top ten lists…

I’ve been gathering some new reviews the past few days, as the year winds down I’ll slowly return to posting more often. In the meantime here is a review of 2009 with the boys from Jib Jab.

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Plasticsoul "Peacock Swagger"

Ugh, Always late to the party. This one just got by me because I did my top ten list early this year, and but it gets special consideration — and I’d like to amend my list for it. Plasticsoul hails from L.A. and this album just blew me off my chair when I popped it in. Then Absolute Powerpop put this as his #1 album of the year. It’s hard to argue against this… it’s simply a work of genius. Opening with “Sentimental F**ks/ Life On Other Planets” is rich with Beatlesque guitar riffs, music hall piano and a drum break that Ringo would envy. The loud “Cock Rock 101” is exactly what you think it sounds like. The following tune “Champion Tragic Boy” channels a bit of Jellyfish, with it’s catchy mid tempo harpsichord melody. A sweet pastoral “Fishwife” full of sitar and bongos follows this, and then the tragic ballad “Cancer” which double tracks lead vocalist Steven Wilson and adds backwards guitar for further effect. The aching chorus of “Cut it out/ Please cut it out. Cancer is breaking me down.” is unforgettable. The album settles into a more laid back groove, with acoustics opening the next six songs, including “Shame” and the very Michael Penn like “New Town Different Day.” The orchestral sweep of “San Francisco” is another easy listening winner here. A duet with Wendy Wang on the countrified “You’re Not Free” has plenty of soul. The album’s mood shifts perfectly into psychedelic pop on “My Three Friends” which follows a rhythm similar to “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” and then continues with the groovy “Rainy Season.” This is the most sophisticated power pop album I’ve heard this year. Don’t miss it.

My Space | CD Baby | Not Lame

Paul Starling and Friendly Foes EP

Paul Starling “Aimed Arrows”

A few years ago Paul Starling gave us the sweet “Ghost Waltz” which was re-released as “Doors and Windows.” The aching vocals are still there with Beach Boys overtones and wall of sound production on the opener “Lay Down Your Weary Arms.” The banjo and lazy day rhythm of “The Mission” is another winner here. A rich contrast of orchestral flourishes and acoustic guitar are part of “Tired Of The Casual Goddess” makes for an echoing dreamscape. Things get a bit too echoey on “Yes I Know What Day It Is,” but the song is a well structured pop blues tune, and this is well worth the meager four bucks on Paul’s site. His blog also contains some free bonus music downloads, so you can get a few samples before you break the bank.


Friendly Foes “So Obscene”

The Detroit trio known as Friendly Foes are back and after last years “Born Radical” it’s great to get this holiday gift. With a bounce and the same raw guitars courtesy of Ryan Allen on “How It Works” with a relentless guitar attack. Then we get the excellent single “Keep Breathing” which gives you a power pop punk groove full of energy and enthusiasm. Lead singer Liz Wittman hits here stride here and does an amazing job. Both “Paint It Gold” and “Line Up” have plenty of enthusiasm and the crashing cymbals of drummer Sean Sommer. Fans of Cheap Trick, Sloan, and Garbage will flip for these hooks that come fast and hard. The acoustic ballad “A Million Scenes” doesn’t quite live up to the other songs, but after these first four shredding head banging tunes you’ll be playing air guitar in no time at all.

MySpace | CDBaby