Mamas Gun's debut album sonically falls somewhere between what you'd expect from
Maroon 5 and
Jamiroquai; not as broad as Maroon 5, but not as soulful as
Jamiroquai. The comparison is an easy leap due to lead singer
Andy Platts' familiar and frequent homage to the "blue-eyed soul" cannon, a place where recent artists like
Maroon 5's
Jason Mraz,
Justin Timberlake,
Kings of Leon's
Anthony Caleb Followill, and
Jamiroquai's
Jay Kay periodically reside.
Route to Riches owes its uniqueness to the band, a band created in today's new organic way: via the Internet search. From the wistful "You Are the Music" (featuring some airtight pop craftsmanship from
Platts on the vocal arrangement) -- which toggles between a funky breakdown to an arena-ready, lighter-in-the-air rideout -- to the get-down "Finger On It," the musicianship -- especially bassist
Rex Horan and drummer
Jack Pollitt -- is expert. The album's closer, "Big Betty," is a sinister jam-band jam. "Let's Find a Way," like most of the album, owes a great debt to '60s and '70s Motown-era-R&B.
Platts and
Mamas Gun, however, give it a suitable update, even a refresher. For an album produced by a band with less than three years in the bank,
Route to Riches is an admirable debut from a band that seems destined for greater commercial and artistic success.