These Seattle garage punks stick with producer
Johnny Sangster for their fifth album, which finds the band whittled down to its core of lead vocalist/guitarist
Evan Foster and keyboard whiz
Nick C. Musically though, they continue to grow as they move into early
Costello/
Cheap Trick pop/punk. The songwriting has taken a major step forward, along with the sound, but both are still firmly rooted in the scrappy '60s style that is obviously close to the duo's hearts.
Foster could stand to lose some of his overt
Costello-isms on songs like "Run and Hide," which sounds like an outtake from
This Year's Model. But there's no denying the propulsive thrust of "Looking for You," with its
Townsend-like guitar runs and cheesy synth bubbling under the surface, or the opening, driving, double slap-in-the-face of "I Want to Be Your Addiction" followed by "Kill My Telephone." There is some late
Beatles influence in the "I Am the Walrus" opening riff of the epic "Vows," which, at five minutes, is the album's longest and most creative track as it breaks into an unusual
Santana-ish jazzy midsection.
The Doors are also evident in the closing, slightly experimental meanderings of the title track. The
Boss Martians get a lot of mileage out of three chords, and even though we've heard all the elements before, the twosome mixes them with enough explosive energy to make this crisp music seem fresh, if not quite new again.