Recorded in intermittent moments while on relentless 2008 and 2009 tours,
the Cliks' second record,
Dirty King, betrays its own piecemeal nature, but does it in a good way, giving the versatile band a chance to show off its many faces. Led by the sexual-grit-and-sawdust-laced vocals of Lucas (once Lilia) Silvieri, the Toronto band deals in late-night-tryst style rock & roll in almost any of the forms that description could conjure up.
Dirty King opens on its trademarked note of slinky syncopated sensuality, moving from the bluesy,
Pretenders-esque "Haunted" to the fevered,
Cramps-like gin-joint reverie of the title track. The Cliks can switch easily from channeling
Concrete Blonde (with a touch of
U2's spiraling, arching guitars) on "Not Your Boy" to mid-career
Beatles on "Red and Blue" to
Gwen Stefani mixing it up with the
Buzzcocks on "Henry." It's all delivered through some nifty production that strikes a balanced pose between down-and-dirty unpredictability and bright and clean pop.
Dirty King is a smart, sexy clarion call to be taken seriously by a rock foursome who deserve to be noted for more than their lead singer's gender-bend. ~ Jason Thurston