So enraptured by misty myths of golden gods, new millennium retro-rockers tend to overlook that a lot '70s hard rock could be kind of pedestrian, assuming that all their pumping Marshall amps are going to catapult them into the leagues of
Zeppelin or
Aerosmith when they often wind up sounding like the poor man's
Foghat.
The Answer doesn't sink to these depths with
Everyday Demons -- their second album but first to get a major American push, thanks to their landing of the plum opening spot for
AC/DC's
Black Ice tour -- thanks in part to their incongruous sobriety. Unlike the tongue in cheek
the Darkness or the unintentional parody of
Wolfmother, the Answer takes things seriously, diligently assembling a collage of
Zep,
AC/DC,
Free, and
Thin Lizzy while writing party anthems that play like sacraments. This sober, studious approach does have a bit of a kick, particularly in regards to the guitars, which thrash and growl, filling up space with a sense of majesty and unwittingly diminishing vocalist
Cormac Neeson, making him sound thin and reedy in comparison, especially when he strives to match
Robert Plant's falsetto. More than anything, it's this lack of star power that brings the
Answer into the arena of
Foghat or
Black Oak Arkansas -- that and a slight deficiency in tunes, as the group can write riffs, not songs. Apart from these two minor issues, the
Answer has the right sound and feel on
Everyday Demons and that does make them the perfect opener for latter day
AC/DC: they work as pleasant appetizer for the main course. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine