The Joys of Living: 2008-2010 compiles tracks recorded by the no-frills, punk-influenced Brit band
Sharks during the group's first two years. As such, it essentially works as a debut for the band in the States, for listeners who might not be familiar with
Sharks' bare-bones rock. Also included here are two newly recorded cuts that fit nicely into the band's sound. Formed in Leamington Spa, England in 2007, the band centers around singer/songwriter James Mattock whose gruff, flat vocal style brings to mind a mix of
the Clash's
Joe Strummer and
Social Distortion's
Mike Ness. As such, the tracks on
Joys of Living are plug-in-and-play-style rockers as much in keeping with the working-class '70s pub rock of band's like
the Stranglers and
Dr. Feelgood as with the such Oi! bands as
the Angelic Upstarts. Furthermore, such tracks as the newly minted "Sweet Harness" and the anthemic "It All Relates" evince a kind of spiritual unity with such equally working-class but uniquely American artists as
the Replacements and
Bruce Springsteen. In that sense,
Sharks stand their ground well against such similarly inclined contemporaries as
the Gaslight Anthem and
the Hold Steady. Ultimately, as the last track on the album -- the bleakly titled "The Light at the End of the Tunnel Is Hell" -- points out,
Sharks have a knack for catchy rock with a darkly sardonic bite. ~ Matt Collar