Filthy Friends began as a lark, a way for mutual admirers
Corin Tucker and
Peter Buck -- known respectively as the guitarists for
Sleater-Kinney and
R.E.M. -- to share a stage together. Rounding out the lineup with Northwest punk stalwart
Kurt Bloch and
R.E.M. associates
Scott McCaughey and
Bill Rieflin,
Tucker and
Buck turned
Filthy Friends into a full-fledged band over the course of 2016. They began that year saluting the recently departed
David Bowie in a set down in Mexico for
Buck's annual Todos Santos Music Festival and closed the year with "Despierta," a song released as part of Dave Eggers'
Donald Trump protest 30 Days, 30 Songs, giving the group the momentum to finish the full-length Invitation in early 2017. Invitation improbably melds all these origin stories: it's a politically charged record delivered with a light touch. It's as fun as it's galvanizing, a record that draws strength from its casual nature. Invitation feels like it was bashed out in a few days, with all the bandmembers doing their best to not rely on old tricks but sometimes succumbing to the temptation anyway. Given the group's lineage, this means
Filthy Friends can suggest a flintier mid-period
R.E.M., where
Buck's ringing guitar is given brio by
Tucker's vocals, but she also seems gentler here than she does with
Sleater-Kinney. Her warmer timbre complements the melancholic undercurrents running through her lyrics, not to mention the hesitant nostalgia of the music. Invitation doesn't merely recall the marquee members of
Filthy Friends: the group also conjures the spirits of such classic alternative peers as
Pixies ("Brother") or such forefathers as
T. Rex ("Come Back Shelley"). All these nods to the past make Invitation seem cozy even when its words are defiant, and if that seems dissonant it also seems appropriate for 2017: outrage can be exhausting, so it's good to find solace in old friends. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine