Album Review
In
the mid 90’s, my brother and I discovered an album called
Squeaky Clean. The melodies were colorful and accompanied
by a modern rock edge that explored pop territory in ways
that few bands of that time did. The band was Pushstart
Wagon. Prayer Chain guitarist Andy Prickett produced the
album. That was all the validation my brother and I
needed for this pop record. By that time in my teenage
life, radio-ready rock was starting to bore me. But
Pushstart had all the right ingredience, and a wack-load
of energy to boot. Besides, The Prayer Chain were my
favorite band by that time, and Mr. Prickett’s
involvement ensured me that Squeaky Clean was the gem I
had initially thought it to be. We wore that record out.
Definitely an anthem album for many Canadian summers. And
then they were not. Pushstart Wagon was just a statistic;
a one record wonder. I never heard what became of the
band, but I never saw another record ever hit a store
shelf.
Well, good things come to those who wait. After a 10-year
hiatus, Pushstart Wagon finally turns in their sophomore
album. Mind you, it’s not like this recording is a
10-year opus in the making. Steve Guiles didn’t fall into
a deep depression a la Brian Wilson 8 years ago while
working on a grand follow-up to their debut. No one (at
lease to my knowledge) was strung up on drugs to rid the
pressure of creating an American pop classic. Nope, none
of that. The boring truth is that life happened. Note to
self: the rockstar gig doesn’t guarantee rockstar cash.
Endnote. But enough of lamenting on why it took Pushstart
so long to present their second recording. Just be glad
that it’s here. The band didn’t die after all, and the
proof is in their self-produced, L.A. Was Our Alamo.
It’s
almost unfair to compare the new album to their previous
effort, considering the maturity that occurs over the
span of 10 years. That said, LAWOA shares very little in
common with the band of the 90’s. The modern power pop of
yesteryear is traded in for a much artier progressive
pop-rock with alt-country overtones, just as the album
title implies. “Paul” kicks the record of to a anthemic
sing-along start, as Guiles begins by saying “If I had
one chance, this is what I’d say…” The one thing that has
remained the same from their debut to this is Steve
Guiles’ vocals. They were one of a handful of reasons I
fell in love with the band those many years ago.
When “Paul” started playing the first time, I was like,
“Yesssss. I missed that voice.” And Pushstart isn’t
afraid of running the risk of alienating their audience
with lyrics like “you said Jesus wouldn’t buy you no
smokes / He wouldn’t laugh at all your off-color jokes /
but you keep coming back like a hearse Cadillac / to the
funeral home that you took out on loan”. Guiles finds a
way to make his themes tie nicely into the feeling and
composition of the songs, leaving him plenty of room to
speak his mind. “Radiation” introduces us to the “L.A.”
theme, and points a sarcastic finger at Bono. The chorus
is illegally infectious, yet bares a hint of Wilco’s
twang. The highlight of the album is track 3. “Country
Star” is a fumbling creed of a love song that is both
heartfelt and tongue-in-cheek. The “yippy yi yay, yippy
yi yay” chorus is a stroke of genius. This song may
contend for best song of 2005, despite the “un-hip for
the hipsters” stigma that the band will undoubtedly face.
With 3 great lead-off songs, the truth is L.A. Was Our
Alamo is top heavy. “Mary” is a good song that has a
waltzing swooning feel not unlike an organic Jars of Clay
or Caedmon’s Call.
The
middle of the album continues with the formula the record
began with, but the hooks need to be a little stronger
and the crunch needs to be a little heavier. My attention
is genuinely grabbed again when “I Could Be So True”
plays. This sounds uncannily similar to something off a
Derek Webb album. The forced nature of “Aisle Walker”
means well, but misses the mark. “Teenage Bible” seems to
want to be the “I Take U Everywhere I Go” relative for
the new album, but again, the results are less than
fluid. However, the “ba ba ba ba” vocals of “Defend You”
forgives the errors heard on LAWOA’s second half. The
record is ended by the triumphant ballad of “Los Angeles.
Guiles sets an intimate tone and has a mature handle on
metaphors. “San Francisco, she wears fishnets / and high,
high heels / with her lips opened wide as she breathes
out a sigh”.
Pushstart Wagon has grown up over 10 years…like the rest
of us did. And they manage to deliver a relevant, clever
and poignant alt-pop record. They survived their Alamo
and they want to tell you about it. Worth getting.
~
Garrett Johnson
Pushstart Wagon (Homepage)
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