New album 'pop-ish' but fun
The popular music industry continues to be the Petri
dish that produces a mass of moldy mediocrity, but some worthwhile acts
go undetected under the microscope.
Among these acts is Math and Science, whose self-titled debut album
on Brick Red Records will hit stores March 6.
"Math and Science is a marriage of Toys R Us to Radio Shack. The
BBC to American sitcoms. It's overachieving low-fi," said Los Angeles
musician John Wolf, creator/singer/songwriter/instrumentalist/visionary
- well, John Wolf is Math and Science. The entire
album is his brainchild, though he had some help from friends.
The album has 12 tracks, each of which comes equipped with a catchy
hook, fresh instrumentation and a good pop sensibility that is not meant
to be taken too seriously. Although a small handful of the tracks are
nauseatingly "pop-ish," the album holds plenty of gems.
The song "Words" starts with a chord progression on a reverberating
keyboard. Then layer upon layer of sound is laid over the track: a drum
beat, thick bass line, acoustic and wah-wah guitar, synthesized sound
effects, a vocal loop. The instrumentation weaves in and out under the
melodic vocals, reminiscent of Elliot Smith if he were on Prozac.
Many of the songs on Math and Science follow
this formula - a simple chord progression with countless layers of multi-textured
instruments. And as far as pop formulas go, this one is a winner.
"She Left Me" is a melancholic tune about, as the title suggests,
love lost. Acoustic guitar and piano flow beautifully above a steady drumbeat
as the sad bass line reluctantly bounces along with Wolf's lament, "And
I'd do anything / to never feel this way again."
Although this song is depressing, the album's tone is lightened with
jingling pop tunes. Songs like "Naked" and "In Your Movie" stick in your
head days after listening. Those tunes' manic swing and infectious groove
often are hard to resist, but they still are easy listening.
While the words "pop music" might make many music lovers cringe, Math
and Science is an album that makes pop seem fun again.
Looking for a record that transcends the mediocrity of the ready-made
bubble gum that is so popular? Lend an ear to Math and Science.
3 1/2 out of 5 stars.
- Jay Boehmer
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