Grooves
Arab
on Radar
The Stolen Singles
(Three One G)
Providence, R.I.'s Arab on Radar were one of those bands people loved
to hate. Everything about them their urine and masturbation-obsessed
lyrics, their arrogant interviews, their very band name seemed
calculated to confuse and irritate as many people as possible. Live,
vocalist, Mr. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder came off like a sexually
confused bed wetter, while drummer Mr. Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
looked like a Blues Brothers reject with shades and slicked-back hair.
Both of them spoke or sang in a high-pitched yelp that made them sound
like eunuchs: anything to make people uncomfortable. At their August
2001 show at Bottom of the Hill, I blurted out, "You guys are the
most annoying band on the planet." Mr. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
responded, "Thanks, we try."
The Stolen Singles serves as the obligatory singles-and-compilation-tracks
retrospective, collecting everything important they did that's not on
one of their four studio albums. As Stolen Singles shows, AOR
were not always the unique force heard on the later albums. The first
several tracks fall into a dissonant but danceable no wave-disco vein
that's not too far off from present-day Bay Area bands like Erase Errata
and Numbers. My word-on-the-street source says their shows were more
fun back in those days, but because I only jumped on board with their
third album, 2000's awesomely obnoxious Soak the Saddle, these
songs feel conservative, like baby steps on the way to them achieving
their own sound.
Starting with 1998's "Samurai Fight Song," though, things
pick up. While AOR's foes have tried to dismiss them as mere no wave
retreads or the retarded offspring of Captain Beefheart and U.S. Maple
(which they could be if that weren't chronologically impossible), the
sheer rock 'n' roll power of songs like "Piggin' in the Pumpkin
Patch" and "Miss American Hair Pie" argues that they
were more than that. They were like a panic attack set to music. (Will
York)
Spacek
Vintage Hi-Tech
(!K7)
Digging through my crate of clichés, I think of the perfect
one for Spacek's sophomore album, Vintage Hi-Tech: absence
makes the heart grow fonder. Not that it's been very long since their
debut, Curvatia (Island Blue), came out just two years ago. Instead
what makes Spacek's latest so sublime is what isn't there.
With calculated use of empty space, the trio of Steve Spacek, Morgan
Zarate, and DJ Jay Scarlett have managed to etch a moment of R&B that
is both utterly modern and completely devoid of trend. While more beat
focused than their earlier efforts, Vintage Hi-Tech retains the
trademark soft, floaty vocals front and center. Around them Spacek weave
a gossamer web of careful clicks, ghostly guitar loops, and points of
bass that pick out a sleek skeleton of soul. From the swinging hip-hop
of the aptly named "Motion Control" to the delicate, glitch
groove of "Starz," the album is a study of minimalist restraint.
There are, however, moments when less is simply less, most tied to
the occasionally flat vocals. With facile lyrics and a delivery that
derives its only affect from production, "Amazing" is only
remarkable in its annoying repetition. Steve Spacek's careful phrasing
occasionally omits all emotion, but more often his sparse and selective
emphasis underlines his considerable talent. Strong on subtlety, Vintage
Hi-Tech is a whisper that turns out to be more stunning than a scream.
Spacek perform Sat/31, 111 Minna, S.F. (415) 974-1719. (Peter
Nicholson)
Good Charlotte
The Young and
the Hopeless (Epic/Daylight)
For a bunch of dudes who were still rocking the Huggies when Ronald
Reagan was in office, the snot-nosed kids of Good Charlotte do a great
job of replicating the snot-nosed, er, men of the early '80s, namely
VJs Mark Goodman and Alan Hunter. After the success of their riff-happy
punk pop single "Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous," someone
at MTV anointed these SoCal kids the princes of punk. Now as the frequent
hosts of All Things Rock, the spiky-haired band get to
offer up snarky comments alongside videos by Kelly Osbourne and Godsmack.
Too bad they don't get a chance to drop some choice words after their
own video clips from their latest album, The Young and the Hopeless.
Now that would be fun.
I'm not saying Good Charlotte are complete frauds, but they certainly
play them on TV. The problem with the band is that for all their punk
veneer the dangerous-looking hair, blatant overuse and abuse
of olde English lettering, and spiderweb tattoos they are about
as subversive as Kelly Clarkson. In the eyes of record execs, the band
have a couple of strong points: power pop hooks and a malleable image.
But even Goodman and Hunter would be able to see the difference between
punk pop forebears like the Ramones and Good Charlotte. For the latter,
punk is merely a genre in which to prop up their brand of pop. Face
it, Good Charlotte make punk rock best suited for the fake world of
the WB you can easily imagine the outcast kids of Smallville
bopping along to "The Anthem." That scenario fits right in
with the title of The Young and the Hopeless it's prefab,
it's cynical, and it works on the level of soap opera. Good Charlotte
play Sat/31, Event Center at San Jose State University, San Jose.
(415) 421-TIXS. (Tony Hayes)
New Pornographers
Electric Version
(Matador)
"All hail what will be revealed today," Neko Case sings triumphantly
on the New Pornographers' Electric Version. It's a fitting declaration
for an album chock full of rock and power pop revelations: As the follow-up
to 2000's Mass Romantic, the Vancouver collective's second album
finds them returning with the summer's giddiest, most glorious 45 minutes
of rock revelry. Fans fearing the New Porns couldn't repeat their debut's
success can rest assured the formula remains the same. With even more
skyscraper-size hooks, multipart harmonies, and Cars-cribbed synths,
the album is a more confident, cohesive improvement of everything that
made Mass Romantic so intoxicating.
As absurdly hook-heavy as it is, however, Electric Version reveals
its charms through repeated listens. This isn't to say the album isn't
as instantly gratifying as its predecessor, but it's hard to take in
all of the nuances and impeccably integrated influences at once. Not
that you need to. On standouts like first single, "The Laws Have
Changed," the band, like everyone else who's crafted the perfect
summer album, just want you to sing along. And song after song, it keeps
getting better: by the time Electric Version closes with "Miss
Teen Wordpower," the New Porns are so enthralled with their own
momentum that they sound like they just might keep going. If they continue
at this rate, let's hope they do. New Pornographers perform June
9 and 10, Bimbo's 365 Club, S.F. (415) 474-0365. (Jimmy Draper)