LEN's 1999 hit "Steal My Sunshine" was an absolute jam. Its Andrea True Connection break and bassline bump meshed seamlessly to Sharon Costanzo's exuberant vocal, and like the best summer songs its lyrical agenda involved little more than getting stupid and lying in the grass. Unfortunately the boozing, partying smash-up that followed
LEN's breakthrough killed the combo's momentum dead, and "Sunshine" was relegated to '90s rock compilations.
LEN's principals (Costanzo and her producer/vocalist brother, Marc) holed up in a studio, but the sessions stalled out. Still, what was recorded has surfaced in 2005 as
Diary of the Madmen, a collection of tracks recorded between 2001 and 2004. Nothing matches the strength of "Sunshine," but overall it's a much more dynamic set than
You Can't Stop the Bum Rush. The music is stronger throughout, like in the backgrounds of "Fight," "Get Down," and "People (Come Together)." (The latter samples
A Tribe Called Quest and the 1968
Friend & Lover hit "Reach out of the Darkness.") And while
LEN's lyrics don't usually progress much past the song titles as emphatics, their sentiments are certainly genuine. "I'm just freaking out 'cause I'm thinking too much," Sharon sings over the pretty strings and softly brushed percussion of "Let It Slide," and repeat collaborator
Biz Markie makes a cameo, too. Other standouts:
LEN remakes
New Edition's "Cool It Now" as fluttery,
Off the Wall-style disco, complete with strings, brass, and wah-wah guitar, and "Dante's Inferno" is a slowly bobbing instrumental that approaches acid jazz. There's some throwaway material on
Diary of the Madmen, but for drawing from three years of sessions it's remarkably cohesive. It took them awhile, but
LEN's sequel to "Sunshine" deserves a listen. ~ Johnny Loftus