Very good choice and not one I would have thought Fog would rate highly but this one should grow on you the more you play it IMO.Am I hearing this wrong? The bouncy pop, slick guitars and vocals on show for the first three tracks sound not unlike Busted. Whilst I’m not a fan of Busted, there’s nothing wrong with this: it’s a great way to kick off the record and thankfully, Fountains of Wayne show that they are more than capable of tackling a variety of styles over the course of this album.
“Stacy’s Mom” is a fantastic song – great chugalong guitars during the verses and an epic singalong chorus. After the onslaught of the power pop, the downbeat “Hackensack” makes for a welcome change of gear. I love “No Better Place”, with its jangling start, the isolated strumming and superb background vocals. I don’t listen to a lot of upbeat pop, and I don’t know if anybody is familiar with his work, but this sound reminds me of Matthew Sweet. What a great three-song run this is.
The quieter acoustics of “Valley Winter Song”, “Hey Julie” (“He’s got me running ‘round the office like a gerbil on a wheel” – nice lyric) and the opening of “All Kinds of Time”, which builds into something bigger, again show off the variety that the band is capable of. Plus, is that a few soft jazz chords on “Halley’s Waitress”? They even throw in a bit of country on “Hung Up On You”, but whilst I like Americana and this is a pleasant enough song, it’s not this album’s finest moment.
“Peace and Love” has a lovely laid-back vibe and some nice background organ in the coda.
The sequencing towards the end of the album is interesting because with “Bought for a Song”, “Supercollider” and bonus track “Elevator Up”, it sounds like they’ve thrown in the optional Oasis tribute module! This is in no way a criticism because all three songs are great.
I think when a band gives you this much variety on a single album, you can’t help but applaud. For the same reason, it can feel “all over the place” and lack a single cohesive theme that marks out the truly great albums. As much as I enjoyed “Stacy’s Mom”, the first three songs had me wondering whether they were a one-trick pony, but the Fountains of Wayne more than demonstrated that this is not the case. I really enjoyed listening to this, and I’m happy to give it 8/10, which for me, puts it alongside Oasis and Led Zeppelin on this thread.
Thanks @FogBlueInSanFran for a great choice.
Just shows you how little one can predict and shouldn't predict regarding what floats one's boat.
To date for me no stand out tracks but all of them and I mean all of them are consistent and great to listen to not a weak song amongst them and that is saying something for me at least for so many tracks.
This one could go all the way to the top if not extremely close to it and on reflection despite some reservations I have perhaps it deserves this status.
For some strange reason when Fog said he was going to focus on post 2000 I thought he was going to pick the band Seether albeit they formed in South Africa.