| Retro
jangle rock sounds abound, and The Grip Weeds lay claim to their own
fair share of 1960s musical memories, though not necessarily the same
obvious ones as other bands. Apart from the clean harmonies and Byrds-y
guitar riffs, The Grip Weeds specialize in creating their own type
of well-crafted pop, sprinkled with extra layers of melodic twists
and turns that reveal themselves with extended listening.
This group isn't afraid of venturing into minor
chords or tempo variations and thus creates music that seems at
first more retro album track fare rather than easily accessible
single-type songs. Yet with additional plays, familiarity breeds
appreciation. These 13 original songs all are well put-together,
feature superb vocal performances (two-, and occasional three-part
harmonizing) and any one of them could stand out proudly with transformed
retro flavor as a modern pop single (there's also a fine cover of
The Who's "Melancholia", featuring lead vocals from standout lead
guitarist Kristin Pinnel).
On this their third CD, Highland Park, New Jersey-based
composing brothers Rick and Kurt Reil have really come into their
own, maturing in style both independently and together. Along with
the requisite Fab Four influences, there are plenty of Hollies,
some Yardbirds, a pinch of Zombies, a dash of Buckinghams and Buffalo
Springfield, and the performance energy drive of The Who and The
Kinks as well. Top this with accents of psychedelia, and you get
a sense of what The Grip Weeds are about.
Summer of a Thousand Years is a fond look backwards,
but it works first and foremost because of the tightness of the
band. There's not a hint of sloppiness in the studio here; you get
the benefit of a well-practiced energetic unit that works as a whole.
You get Kurt Reil on drums, Rick Reil on guitars, Michael Nattboy
contributing very solid basslines throughout (check out his fretwork
on "Moving Circle"), and Kristin Pinell offering up the perfect
complement stylistically in all lead guitar moments. The brothers
Reil trade off on lead vocals (usually reflecting which of the two
wrote that particular song), while Pinell lends her capable voice
to the mix. Andy Burton adds some keyboards (Wurlitzer, mellotron,
etc.) on a few tracks as well.
The second reason this all works is the strength
of the songs. The first single is "Rainy Day #3" featuring drummer
Kurt on lead vocals (which is very Dave Clark-ish), backed by brother
Rick with perfect chorus harmonies, while Kristin adds just the
right amount of harmonica highlights. The lyrics are simple yet
effective, again mirroring the style of years past. If that's not
good enough for you, blame it on the weatherman.
"Save My Life" has an almost Spongetones meets the
Byrds-like flavor, as it jangles its way through a story of a woman
in need: "inside / she cried / save my life". "She Surrounds Me"
rocks nicely in a psychedelic manner, with lyrics that are adept
without being profound. It's your basic story of how he seeks to
know all through surrounding himself with her love: "Words are spoken
/ I am turning the key / spells are broken deep inside of me."
"Don't Look Over Your Shoulder" is another catchy
vehicle with harmony vocals and great accompaniment on drums and
guitars. "Future Move" is quietly beautiful, with its great bass
work holding the bottom together beneath vocals talking again around
love: "Out of sight and out of my mind / when I caught your eye
I felt the future move." "Window" (a rare Pinell/ K. Reil collaboration)
is a pretty song with trippy electric guitars behind suitably psychedelic
references. "Is It Showing" is another fine number, while "Changed"
attacks with nice guitar and drums that rumble beneath. None of
these songs reinvent the wheel, but they all keep you rock-and-rolling
along.
Check out the rhythm section working hard on "Love's
Lost on You", with Kurt challenging himself on drums, and Michael
Nattboy shining with impressive bass work. "Love That Never Ends"
follows the formula of jangle pop and makes an old sound sing anew.
Frankly, there isn't one bad track here. All of the songs offer
the quality sound of the sixties with the energy and technique of
a new millennium.
The CD closes with the title track, a somber musical
treatise on how the past converges with the future when you're living
in the present in the summer of a thousand years (hey, as they say
in the lyric -- the more you learn, the less you know). The overall
point is that many remain convinced that music reached its peak
in the revered heyday of the mid-1960s. For those who loved that
wonderful sound, The Grip Weeds is a rewarding musical anachronism,
infusing the past with the present. Their retro melodies are stupendous,
the harmonies great, and the skill of their musicianship more evident
than ever. Summer Of A Thousand Years has that sort of timeless
appeal, with the added benefit being this: the more you listen,
the better it gets.
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