Put together a bright, breezy guitar pop group with two respected producers and it should be a can't-miss proposition. Unfortunately,
Cut Off Your Hands' debut
You and I, which was produced by
Bernard Butler and
Stephen Street (who also mixed), is well-made but, strangely, not as engaging as it should be. The band has an appealing sound, coming off like New Zealand's answer to
Maximo Park or
Franz Ferdinand (with a touch of
the Cure's more upbeat stuff for good measure), and the raw energy of their live shows and early EPs overcame any clichés or obvious influences in their music. The polish
Street and
Butler bring to
You and I reveals just how poppy, and samey, the band's songs can be: it's far from a bad thing that most
Cut Off Your Hands' tracks boast huge choruses, but when those choruses feel almost interchangeable from song to song, it's a problem. The album's first half is dominated by tracks that are charming on their own terms -- "Expectations" is refreshingly brash, and "Oh Girl" could be a lost single from some late-'80s new wave band -- but lose their impact as a whole. It's not until the middle of the album, when "Heartbreak" changes from what seems like a typical, strummy acoustic ballad into something stranger with odd backing vocals and keyboards, that
You and I gets interesting, albeit not consistently good: "Still Fond" and "Closed Eyes" nail the nervy-yet-sophisticated vibe the first half of the album aimed for, and "Nostalgia" invokes
Beach Boys harmonies and a ton of reverb to live up to its wistful name. However, when
Cut Off Your Hands try for honest-to-goodness ballads, as on "In the Name of Jesus Christ" and the odd album closer "Someone Like Daniel," they stumble. Even so,
You and I's stranger moments reveal that
Cut Off Your Hands have more personality than the album's more tasteful songs suggest.