***1/2 The Figgs
SUCKING IN STEREO
(Hearbox)
Clocking in at a concise 31 minutes, the Figgs’ second release for
the Hearbox label delivers instant gratification. Every track is short
and catchy, and most of them grab hold the first time around. Once a
polite little pop group, the Figgs have taken onýthe rock-and-roll
drive of singer/guitarist Mike Gent’s other band, the Gentlemen,
without losing their old appreciation for a strong hook. The closest
thing to a pure pop number here is “Cheap Cassettes,” with Gent
waxing nostalgic about the “cheap cassettes of Motörhead” that he
used to wear out. Elsewhere, loud and fast rules. “Opening Night”
is the Replacements’ “Talent Show” as rewritten by a band who are
actually enjoying themselves. “Reaction” is a cocky strut that one-time
touring partner Graham Parker would love to have written. The band’s old
’60s garage-rock tendencies come on strong in “Gotta Get Out,” which refers
to the Outsiders’ oldie “Time Won’t Let Me” (the Gravel Pit’s Jed Parish
plays the borrowed keyboard lick). And “Dance Lesson” is proof enough that
Gent has absorbed those Motörhead tapes. The disc is only as polished
as it needs to be — enough to bring the tunes out but not so much as to
obscure the blustery bravado of a band rocking a packed house at a sweaty
club and enjoying every minute of it.
— Brett Milano
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