Yellow #5's gritty debut, the wild and whiskey-soaked
Demon Crossing, echoes
Tender Prey-era
Nick Cave and early
Concrete Blonde filtered through a broken pint glass. The Los Angeles by way of New Orleans trio is led by the purely nocturnal bass/accordion/vocal prowess of
Molly McGuire, whose delivery is as whip-crack volatile as it is undeniably sensual.
McGuire and guitar player
Dave Catching, who split their time with
Mondo Generator, a
Nick Oliveri of
Queens of the Stone Age side project, are the perfect left and right branch to
Kyuss and
Fu Manchu drummer
Brant Bjork's formidable trunk. The three take on a well-worn dirty smoky blues-based form of bar band posturing and make it uncomfortably real and refreshingly atmospheric. Bookended by a carnival-gone-wrong accordion instrumental,
Demon Crossing effortlessly thunders through explosive, beat-heavy rockers like "Auto Pilot" and "Seven Addictions" with mad glee, but it's the album's lazier numbers that stick to the listener's eyelids -- "Moon Man," with its dripping circular slide riff and "Deviant Angel"'s
University-era
Throwing Muses languidness are both custom built for that 3 a.m. drive home from God knows where. Described by the band as "Inspired by the twin moons of a nasty breakup and a desire to musically re-create the atmosphere of Nola's Circle Bar, to whose recently passed owner Kelly Keller the album is dedicated,"
Demon Crossing feels like a drunk, late-night conversation with a potentially dangerous new friend. ~ James Christopher Monger