While bands like
Wolfmother,
Jet and
Kings of Leon have managed to carve out a niche in the post-millennial alternative music audience for rehashes of the excesses of '70s FM rock, the decade's history on the AM band remains unshakably uncool.
The Mellowmen wouldn't have it any other way. From their undeniably naff name to the album's retro graphic design and ironic title, this Swedish quintet are unapologetic in their lack of fashion; the key is that the
Mellowmen have not taken that unfortunate extra step into turning anti-fashion into its own trend, turning into slavish
Electric Light Orchestra or Wings copycats with an "ironic" twist. Listening to
Tomorrow's Sound Today, it's clear that while these guys are intimately familiar with all 25 volumes of Rhino's Have a Nice Day series, mere mimicry is not on their minds. As a result, '70s pop lifts like the
George Harrison-like slide guitar solo on "Justify My Madness" or the pure bubblegum bounce of the gloriously tuneful "Sunshine Shell" are applied to otherwise up-to-the-minute indie tunes. One subtle but important distinction is that the Mellowmen don't try to come off as the second coming of
the Beach Boys vocally: since the days of
Jellyfish, too many retro-minded pop bands have tried to pull off elaborate vocal harmonies that they don't have the chops to accomplish or the imagination to properly arrange. Throughout
Tomorrow's Sound Today, keyboardist Andreas Nyberg covers nearly all of the vocals himself; the rather weedy vocal harmony tag at the end of "My Dove" shows the wisdom of this decision. The press kit for
Tomorrow's Sound Today lists a dozen acts from
Ladytron (not so much) to
10cc (quite, especially the early
Graham Gouldman era) as influences (the vibraphone and pedal steel parts on the utterly lovely closing acoustic ballad "Here Am I" suggest that
the High Llamas could have been the 13th), but the key quote comes from the head of their label, who compares the Mellowmen to the unjustly ignored '90s power pop act
the Sneetches. Those who remember the pride of the Bay Area will see the wisdom of this comparison on the first listen to
Tomorrow's Sound Today: these laid-back but unfailingly catchy tunes casually plunder pop's back pages without making a fetish of their finds. ~ Stewart Mason