Showing posts with label Greenberry Woods. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greenberry Woods. Show all posts

Saturday, April 25, 2026

10 SONGS: 4/25/2026

10 Songs is a weekly list of ten songs that happen to be on my mind at the moment. The lists are usually dominated by songs played on the previous Sunday night's edition of This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl. The idea was inspired by Don Valentine of the essential blog I Don't Hear A Single

This week's edition of 10 Songs draws exclusively from the playlist for This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio # 1333

VICKI PETERSON AND JOHN COWSILL: Downtown

We've been way too late in programming music from the fabulous Vicki Peterson and John Cowsill. We've played their respective alma maters the Bangles and the Cowsills a lot, and we've played Vicki Peterson's work with sister-in-law Susan Cowsill in the Continental Drifters, but so far our pal Rich Firestone's sublime SPARK Syracuse show Radio Deer Camp has enjoyed an exclusive right to fill the airwaves with Vicki 'n' John. Now, news that pop music's favorite couple will be visiting Syracuse's Westhill High School for a show on June 4th has us all giddy. We hope Rich doesn't mind us sharing the love for Vicki Peterson and John Cowsill.

The specifics of the duo's 6/4 Syracuse appearance are especially enticing:

"The first ever West Side Rock Show featuring The Westhill Rock Music Program! The show will feature all of the bands in Westhill’s Rock Music Program including the Killer Pancakes, Clockwork, and our faculty band, After School Special. Student performances to be followed by our headliner and special guests, Vicki Peterson and John Cowsill! Vicki was the lead guitarist and founding member of the iconic all female band in the 1980s, the Bangles. Their hits included "Walk Like an Egyptian," "Manic Monday" and "Eternal Flame." John was part of the Cowsills and also toured with the Beach Boys for almost 25 years. Vicki and John are currently touring in support of their brand new album, Long After the Fire. Vicki will even be performing some Bangles hits with the kids in the Rock Music Program! It will be an amazing evening of great music! Doors open at 6:00 PM. Performance begins at 6:45 PM. FREE CONCERT BUT TICKET RESERVATIONS ARE REQUIRED!"

To paraphrase Lenny Haise, former guitarist for teen sensations the Wonders: I'm going, you're going, we're ALL going.

And starting this week, TIRnRR is playing selections from Vicki and John's album Long After The Fire. "Downtown" joins TIRnRR here, and another track from the album will spin this Sunday night. We're happy to follow Radio Deer Camp's lead. Giddy, I tell ya. Giddy.

GENERATION X: Ready Steady Go

Congratulations to Billy Idol on being named to The Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame. My interest in the esteemed Mr. Idol goes back to his pre-solo days with the dynamic punk/pop combo Generation X. Man, I loved Generation X, and my favorite among Gen X favorites remains "Ready Steady Go," a willfully and triumphantly over-the-top celebration of watching the Who on UK TV in the '60s. In love with Cathy McGowan? Can't blame you, Billy. Can't blame you.


THE RAMONES: I Don't Want To Grow Up


Preach, brudders. I understand exactly what you mean.

THE ROLLING STONES: Can't You Hear Me Knocking

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

DEAN LANDEW: Summertime Friday Night

No, it's not summertime yet. And this posts on a Saturday, so even our next Friday feels like a Plimsouls-sanctioned million miles away. No matter! And why wait to the last minute anyway? Dean Landew has the song we need now. Winter? Spring? Summer? Fall? It's a year-round feeling, and I say it's Friday night until the Bay City Rollers declare otherwise.

THE GREENBERRY WOODS: Whenever You Want Me Too

It's All Good, Sugar... is a new album from fabled rockin' pop group the Greenberry Woods, and the very fact that there is such a thing as a new album from the Greenberry Woods oughta be cause for joy and merriment across the friggin' globe. The album reached us too late to include in this week's playlist, and our next show's humble salute to the life and legacy of the late Flashcubes/1.4.5. guitarist Paul Armstrong didn't allow us enough room to program any Greenberry Woods. BUT! This week's extravaganza did include an encore spin of the album's fab advance single "Whenever You Want Me Too." From a previous 10 Songs:

"Rapple Dapple! In my liner notes to Rhino's 1997 compilation Poptopia! Power Pop Classics Of The '90s, I wrote:

" 'The unfortunate fate of the Greenberry Woods offers a sobering reminder that even the best pop bands can still be resolutely ignored by the buying public. Maryland's favorite pop sons released two absolutely dreamy albums--1994's Rapple Dapple and 1995's Big Money Item--only to be met with appalling indifference by retail and radio. Following the group's apparent demise, a couple members resurfaced in a new group called Splitsville, and released an interesting, cartoony debut album on Big Deal in '96. But Splitsville ain't a proper substitute for the Greenberry Woods, whose passing we mourn here with a spin of their signature tune "Trampoline," an impossible-to-resist barrage of singalong charm and halcyon AM-pop style. Come back, guys!"

"(Before we go any further, it's important to note that, my '97 self notwithstanding, I soon became a Splitsville fan as well. Pop pundits. We can be a mite slow on the uptake sometimes.)

"And now, the return of '90s pop stars the Greenberry Woods should merit a guaranteed berth on any power pop radio playlist, and their new single 'Whenever You Want Me Too' certainly deserves that instant-add status. Hell, 'Whenever You Want Me Too' woulda fit in on Rapple Dapple, and I further dig its correct titular use of the word 'too' to create an effective pun for would-be lovers everywhere. We want this. We hope you want it too."

COCKEYED GHOST: I Hate Rock 'n' Roll
ARTHUR CONLEY: Sweet Soul Music

"I hate rock 'n' roll." "Do you like good music? That sweet soul music?" Sometimes the segues just write themselves.

THE BEATLES: Taxman
THE MONKEES: The Door Into Summer


Aftermath of Tax Day: With your fools' gold stacked up all around you, declare the pennies on your eyes. Consult your travelogue of maybe-next-year places, and be thankful they don't take it all.

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider a visit to CC's Tip Jar. You can also become a Boppin' booster on my Patreon page.

I compiled a various-artists tribute album called Make Something Happen! A Tribute To The Flashcubes, and it's pretty damned good; you can read about it here and order it here. My new book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) is now available, and you can order an autographed copy here. You can still get my previous book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones from publisher Rare Bird Books, OR an autographed copy here. If you like the books, please consider leaving a rating and/or review at the usual online resources.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. You can read about our history here.

Saturday, March 21, 2026

10 SONGS: 3/21/2026

10 Songs is a weekly list of ten songs that happen to be on my mind at the moment. The lists are usually dominated by songs played on the previous Sunday night's edition of This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl. The idea was inspired by Don Valentine of the essential blog I Don't Hear A Single

This week's edition of 10 Songs draws exclusively from the playlist for This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio # 1328

THE ON AND ONS: Speck Of Smiling Faces

From the group's native Australia to our native Syracuse airwaves, the On and Ons have been fixtures on This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio since their 2020 EP Menacing Smile, and that unrelenting barrage of pure pop oomph will keep on keepin' on and on with the forthcoming On and Ons album Luminary. The album ain't out until April, but advance single "Speck Of Smiling Faces" has already made its way to hearts, ears, and smiling faces everywhere in the here, the now, and the AWIGHT!. One should expect no less from  luminaries like the On and Ons.

THE COCKTAIL SLIPPERS: Joyride

"St. Valentine's Day Massacre" by the great Norwegian garage pop group the Cocktail Slippers is one of my all-time favorite tracks, and it earned its own chapter in my 2024 book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1). Through an evolving line-up, the group has continued to fascinate and amaze with the same tightly-executed sass that made us love 'em in the first place. New single "Joyride" offers another delighted cruise in the Slippersmobile, where speed limits are optional and the radio's volume is always set to SURRENDER!! Joy! Let's ride.

THE SURFRAJETTES: She Loves You

The Surfrajettes at Middle Ages Beer Hall In Syracuse 3/19/2026

Decades ago, I had the pleasure of witnessing a performance by the Ventures, wherein the group had the admirable audacity to open their fantastic show with "Walk--Don't Run." The club owner introduced the Ventures as "the best fucking dance band in the world," and damned if they didn't prove it.

That torch has been passed to a new generation of North Americans. Over the course of the past eleven years, Toronto's phenomenal pop combo the Surfrajettes have established themselves as one of this world's preeminent surf instrumental groups. On Thursday, the Surfrajettes and their ace opening act Bethlehem Shalom kicked off the second leg of their Road Dogs tour in our beloved Salt City for a show at Middle Ages Beer Hall, and their energetic fun-in-the-sun twang served as the perfect weapon to drive a motherlovin' stake through the icy heart of Syracuse Winter. Armed with original tunes and impeccable savvy in choosing covers (routinely reaching outside the box to convert material by Cream, Iron Butterfly, Spice Girls, and more into their own chosen style), the Surfrajettes are what the Ventures were: The best fucking dance band in the world. The Ventures would be proud to share that distinction with the Surfrajettes.

I remain chagrined by the fact that TIRnRR didn't get around to programming the Surfrajettes until last week's spin of the title track from their Easy As Pie album. We're slackers, but we're slackers with a vision. This week brings us Surfrajettes TIRnRR spin # 2, as the 'Jettes apply yeah-yeah-yeah reverb to "She Loves You" (from previous album Roller Fink). This coming Sunday night brings a reprise of "Easy As Pie," and Dana and I agree that maybe we should just commit to playing the Surfrajettes every week from now on. Pipeline to the stars, man. Surf's up.

THE GREENBERRY WOODS: Whenever You Want Me Too

Rapple Dapple! In my liner notes to Rhino's 1997 compilation Poptopia! Power Pop Classics Of The '90s, I wrote:

"The unfortunate fate of the Greenberry Woods offers a sobering reminder that even the best pop bands can still be resolutely ignored by the buying public. Maryland's favorite pop sons released two absolutely dreamy albums--1994's Rapple Dapple and 1995's Big Money Item--only to be met with appalling indifference by retail and radio. Following the group's apparent demise, a couple members resurfaced in a new group called Splitsville, and released an interesting, cartoony debut album on Big Deal in '96. But Splitsville ain't a proper substitute for the Greenberry Woods, whose passing we mourn here with a spin of their signature tune 'Trampoline,' an impossible-to-resist barrage of singalong charm and halcyon AM-pop style. Come back, guys!"

(Before we go any further, it's important to note that, my '97 self notwithstanding, I soon became a Splitsville fan as well. Pop pundits. We can be a mite slow on the uptake sometimes.)

And now, the return of '90s pop stars the Greenberry Woods should merit a guaranteed berth on any power pop radio playlist, and their new single "Whenever You Want Me Too" certainly deserves that instant-add status. Hell, "Whenever You Want Me Too" woulda fit in on Rapple Dapple, and I further dig its correct titular use of the word "too" to create an effective pun for would-be lovers everywhere. We want this. We hope you want it too.

GENERAL JOHNSON AND JOEY RAMONE: Rockaway Beach (On The Beach)

From a previous post:

I first heard about this beach-music team-up of Joey Ramone and former Chairmen of the Board singer General Johnson when Joey Ramone called to tell me about in 1994. Yes, I am cooler than you are. (I should probably let that illusion stand in place, but Joey's call to me was just a follow-up to a Goldmine interview we'd done within the previous week, as he wanted to make sure I was aware of a number of projects he was doing outside the Ramones' aegis. He never called again. My claim to being cooler than you are is, y'know, suspect at best.)

(Those interviews are, of course, preserved in my 2023 book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones. You should get yourself a copy from publisher Rare Bird Books, or contact me directly to purchase an autographed copy.)

But: back to the record! It's an ongoing testimony to the greatness of Ramones songs that they can thrive in different interpretations. The Swedish girl-pop group Shebang did a girl-pop bubblegum version of "Sheena Is A Punk Rocker." Ronnie Spector covered "Here Today Gone Tomorrow" and "She Talks To Rainbows." KISS did "Do You Remember Rock 'n' Roll Radio?" with more kitchen-sink Phil Spector than the Spector-produced original. The Nutley Brass and the Ramonetures did entire albums of Ramones covers, in the respective styles of elevator music and surf instrumentals. It all worked. These Blitzkrieg bops remain more versatile and universal than anyone realized at the time.

Remaking the power-pop bubblepunk of "Rockaway Beach" as a soulful slow-groove Carolina beach shag would seem a preposterous notion...until you hear it. Whoa! Grab a blanket, grab your honey, and snuggle by the fire as the sun descends. It's not hard, not far to reach. Hitch a ride, baby.

MADONNA: Dear Jessie

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

THE DOLLYROTS: Attention Span

"Attention Span...?!" See, that's kind of a problem area for us, especially for me. I suffer from what my daughter calls ADOS, which is Attention Deficit...Oooooo, SHINY!

Where was I? Oh, right. "Attention Span," the flat-out full-on invigmoratin' new single from the irresistible rockin' pop forces of the Dollyrots. PAY ATTENTION! It spins here again this Sunday night.

SLY AND THE FAMILY STONE: Stand!

Good advice.

THE RAMONES: I Don't Want To Grow Up

Also good advice. 

THE LITTLE GIRLS: How To Pick Up Girls

And we finish with a snarky 'n' buoyant pop tune pretending to offer good advice while still being, y'know, snarky. I suspect the Little Girls are snickering at the odious machinations of hapless would-be Lotharios. I say we snicker right along with them.

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider a visit to CC's Tip Jar. You can also become a Boppin' booster on my Patreon page.

I compiled a various-artists tribute album called Make Something Happen! A Tribute To The Flashcubes, and it's pretty damned good; you can read about it here and order it here. My new book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) is now available, and you can order an autographed copy here. You can still get my previous book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones from publisher Rare Bird Books, OR an autographed copy here. If you like the books, please consider leaving a rating and/or review at the usual online resources.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. You can read about our history here.

Friday, November 13, 2020

POPTOPIA! Power Pop Classics Of The '90s

In 1997, I was hired by Rhino Records for a freelance assignment to write liner notes for a compilation CD called Poptopia! Power Pop Classics Of The '90s. It was one of three decade-specific pop collections released simultaneously. Jordan Oakes wrote liners for the '70s disc, John M. Borack wrote for the '80s disc, and Ken Sharp provided editorial supervision for the lot of them. Jordan, John, and Ken are pretty good company to keep, and I'm proud to have been associated with this project.

I wish I still had my original manuscript for the liner notes; at Rhino's request, the original included additional paragraphs discussing a few other acts the label had in mind to include on the CD, acts that Rhino was either unable to license or chose to omit. Here is my essay as it was published in the CD booklet.

The 1990s are the best of times to be a power pop fan. 

Oh, you can scoff if you wish, but the evidence is incontrovertible. Aside from the plethora of classic pop reissues available now in greater abundance than ever before, the '90s have seen a veritable explosion of worthy acts working within the broad context of pure pop and power pop, vying for your heart, mind and wallet with unabashed hooks and harmonies, and a killer instinct that'll go for your throat if your heart won't answer.

Power pop, that increasingly generic catchphrase for melodic rock 'n' roll, has shed some of its excess baggage over the years. For one thing, the retro elements are far more subdued: you don't see a lot of skinny ties or mohair suits on pop bands nowadays. For another, pop is at long last starting to escape from its cult ghetto. Billboard did a report in '95 about power pop's apparent resurgence, and Tony Perkins' annual Poptopia! festival in L.A. promises to raise pop's profile even more. And, while massive pop mania remains an unlikely prospect, the upshot is that more cool bands are forming and playing, and more cool records are being made.

A lot more cool records are being made. While previous volumes in the Poptopia! series have the advantage of historical perspective, we're still right in the thick of things when it comes to '90s power pop. There's a desire to present as much of what's going on as space permits. But space simply won't permit a proper cross section of current successful pop acts, along with the lesser-known pop acts toiling in underserved anonymity. There are dozens upon dozens of worthy tracks, but this CD will only hold 18 of 'em.

So an attempt was made to balance the big names with the relative obscurities. Choices were made--some due to circumstances beyond Rhino's control (and pocketbook)--but it's hoped that the result offers a fair representation of what the pop scene sounds like in this last decade of the 20th century. It sounds pretty damned good to me, and if it's possible for you to listen to this in your car at full-throttle, well then, you've got the right idea.

Matthew Sweet has come a long way since we first heard of him in 1983, as a member of Oh-OK, the nearly forgotten Athens, GA band then principally known because one of the members was Michael Stipe's sister. Sweet put all of that behind him with his third album, 1991's Girlfriend, an engaging pop tour de force propelled by the guitar work of Richard Lloyd and Robert Quine (formerly of Television and Richard Hell and the Voidoids, respectively). The title track and "I've Been Waiting" are the kind of lush pop tunes you wanna hear over and over again.

If a bunch of informed pop pundits were to vote on the definitive pop albums of the '90s, one that is certain to appear on a majority of ballots would be Bellybutton, the 1990 debut from Jellyfish. They were an almost defiantly pop act, wallowing in trashy retro chic, but delivering the goods with unparalleled panache on wax. Bellybutton is loaded with willful cops from the Beatles/Beach Boys bag o' tricks, notably on the MTV faves "The King Is Half-Undressed" and "Baby's Coming Back," and on "That Is Why," the album's most brazenly Beatlesque tune. After a line-up change, Jellyfish recorded one more album, 1993's Spilt Milk, before ceasing to exist.

Q magazine described the music of Ride as "the missing link between The Monkees and Jesus And Mary Chain." This Oxford, England foursome evolved over a series of records for Sire, but embraced the pop ideal for one album only, 1992's Going Blank Again. The highlight of Going Blank Again is "Twisterella," a swirling, head-spinning popfest. Following this beguiling taste of a perfect single, Ride immediately forgot about pop entirely and rode into the sunset in 1995.

Gigolo Aunts started out as a relatively low-key power pop combo, as demonstrated by a quick spin of 1988's Everybody Happy, an overlooked but ace exercise in a-boppin' and a-poppin'. Since then, the Aunts cranked up the amps and raised the grunge quotient just a touch for 1994's Flippin' Out. "Cope" is an interesting illustration of the group's hard pop dichotomy at its best: even as they start to swagger in prototypical college-radio fashion, just when you think you've got the song pegged as an agreeable but standard alterna-rocker, that chorus comes outta nowhere to imbed its whale-size hooks into your soul.

It's unfair (and technically inaccurate), but history may wind up remembering The Rembrandts as mere one-hit wonders for "I'll Be There For You," their phenomenally popular theme song for the TV sitcom Friends. The duo of Danny Wilde and Phil Solem has been revered for their irresistible pop savvy ever since their days in the early '80s pop band Great Buildings. As The Rembrandts, they've released three albums of luxurious, melodic pop cast in the image of The Everly Brothers, and had a # 14 hit in 1991 with "Just The Way It Is, Baby." "Rollin' Down The Hill" is from their second album, 1992's Untitled, and it provides a perfect encapsulation of The Rembrandts' inviting, understated sound.

One of the more obscure acts on this compilation, The Tearaways evolved from a Santa Monica pop band called The Volcanos, and their simply awesome 1993 debut See The Sound (produced by 20/20-Three O'Clock veteran Earle Mankey) reveals a band eminently worthy of the widest possible attention. "Jessica Something" is but one of many alluring tracks on that debut, an album that all pop fans should immediately seek out with eager dispatch. While a touch less immediate than See The Sound, 1996's De La Vina nonetheless serves further notice that we should be keeping an eye and ear on these Tearaways.

With a glorious vocal blend that calls to mind the magnificence of The Hollies, The Posies have proven there's more to Seattle music than grunge and more grunge. While Posies Ken Stringfellow and Jon Auer's stint as members of the '90s touring version of Big Star is an impressive résumé item, it's still just a footnote to The Posies' own accomplishments. Though fans are divided over the merits of the group's early, smoother pop albums (1988's Failure and 1990's Dear 23) and the sharper edge added to 1993's Frosting On The Beater and 1996's Amazing Disgrace, Frosting On The Beater seems to be the most popular Posies work. "Solar Sister" is a proud representative of that long-player, its edge still sharp but its shiny pop sheen undiminished.

"If I had the Wondermints back in 1967, I would have taken Smile out on the road." What kind of band must Wondermints be to inspire such an unbelievably cool benediction from Brian Wilson--Brian friggin' Wilson!--pop's most holy patron saint himself? The Wondermints are probably the most acclaimed of all the acts in L.A.'s burgeoning power pop scene. The group's accomplished and avowedly pop approach, which combines tantalizing hints of every band you loved on AM radio in the '60s with a touch of early '80s new wave, was first released on a series of indie cassettes, and on their first 45, the superb, haunting "Proto-Pretty." This all-American group had to go all the way to Japan to get a record deal, though New York City's Big Deal label came through with a domestic release in late '96.

The Lemonheads have evolved from a nondescript posthardcore outfit into an engaging pop conglomeration centered around singer/guitarist Evan Dando. The group first founds its audience via a smirking cover of Simon & Garfunkel's "Mrs. Robinson" on 1992's It's A Shame About Ray. Come On Feel The Lemonheads (1993) gave us the juicy, jangly "Into Your Arms" and secured The Lemonheads' position as alternative-pop superstars. And, lest it be forgotten that a certain measure of Tiger Beat-style idolatry should be part and parcel of genuine pop mania, then you've gotta concede that Dando's good looks certainly didn't hurt the group's commercial prospects. (Though if one more joker refers to Dando as an "alterna-hunk," I'll personally swat said joker with a rolled-up Shaun Cassidy poster.)

Back when '70s nostalgia seemed ludicrous, brothers Jeffrey and Steven McDonald set about transforming their punkish combo Redd Kross into an aggressive post-punk pop band that seemed to draw equal inspiration from KISS and The Bay City Rollers. The McDonalds even appeared in 1991's '70s-revival flick The Spirit Of '76 with David Cassidy! Today, Redd Kross is rightly recognized as a potent pop powerhouse, capable of making little girls swoon on the one hand and raisin' the motherlovin' roof on the other. Both elements are displayed in "Lady In The Front Row," a souring treatise on rock 'n' roll stardom and fandom (from the group's ace 1993 Phaseshifter album), a track which cordially invites you to sway with cigarette lighter held high.

Both members of Jellyfish, albeit at different times, Jason Falkner and Jon Brion finally got to be in a band together when they formed The Grays, an act with a decidedly harder edge than that of the lads' goofier alma mater. The Grays' 1994 Ro Sham Bo album may have been a touch too heavy for some Jellyfish devotees, but tracks like "Same Thing," emblematic of the group's sound, did find an audience among more aggressive rockin' poppers.

The Rooks have become New York City's most notable pop act, beloved by the discerning few who know of the group's sublime work-- of singer/guitarist Michael Mazzarella's nonpareil pop originals and Kristin Pinell's shimmering guitar leads. "Reasons" was first heard on the band's debut album The Rooks, and it's distinguished by a drop-dead gorgeous chorus that will convince you the late Chris Bell and Gene Clark are harmonizing along from beyond this mortal coil. By the time you read this, The Rooks will have a new album out from the visionary Not Lame label.

The unfortunate fate of The Greenberry Woods offers a sobering reminder that even the best pop bands can still be resolutely ignored by the buying public. Maryland's favorite pop sons released two absolutely dreamy albums--1994's Rapple Dapple and 1995's Big Money Item--only to be met with appalling indifference by retail and radio. Following the group's apparent demise, a couple members resurfaced in a new group called Splitsville, and released an interesting, cartoony debut album on Big Deal in '96. But Splitsville ain't a proper substitute for The Greenberry Woods, whose passing we mourn here with a spin of their signature tune "Trampoline," an impossible-to-resist barrage of singalong charm and halcyon AM-pop style. Come back, guys!

On the more alternative side of pop, Velocity Girl offers a sound that Rolling Stone described as "haunting yet hummable noise pop." The group has done a whole passel o' records for Sub Pop, with "I Can't Stop Smiling" coming to us from 1994's ¡Simpatico! It may not be power pop in the traditional Beatles/Who/Beach Boys/Big Star sense, but it sure is catchy nonetheless.

With frank Big Star moves in its music and an album, 1994's Teenage Symphonies To God, named for Brian Wilson's long-ago description of his goals for The Beach Boys' aborted Smile LP, Velvet Crush makes no secret of its influences. This Rhode Island trio has made a name for itself as a confident purveyor of Big Star/Byrds janglepop while avoiding mere imitation. "Hold Me Up," from Teenage Symphonies To God, is the group's best-known track.

Vancouver pop band Zumpano plays an almost giddily pleasant pastiche of '60s pure pop, recalling scads of Turtles and Grass Roots 45s spun on the neighbor girl's Close-N-Play record machine. The incongruity of such a clean-sounding pop act recording for Sub Pop, a label that usually favors at least a bit more grit in its grooves, didn't stop 1995's Look What The Rookie Did from being a delightfully sugary confection, guaranteed to get your fingers to snappin' and your teeth to rottin'. "The Party Rages On" is a wonderfully cheery kiss-off, the nicest sounding hit-the-road-ya-crumb ditty to come down the pike in recent memory.

Chapel Hill, NC's native son Rick Miller, aka Rick Rock, is better known in pop circles as the one and only Parthenon Huxley--the name he used for his stunning 1988 album Sunny Nights--and as producer of records by E (today better known as front man of The Eels). Nowadays, singer/guitarist Huxley fronts a threesome called P. Hux, aided and abetted by bassist Rob Miller and drummer Gordon Townsend. P. Hux is resolutely rock-solid and proved it on Deluxe, a record proclaimed by readers of Audities magazine ("The Journal Of Insanely Great Pop") as the very best of '95. If "Every Minute" is your first dose of Huxley, then you've got some catching up to do.

Finally, The Idle Wilds bring the Big Star connection home, with a very nice debut album, 1995's Dumb, Gifted And Beautiful, released by erstwhile Big Star label Ardent (for which Jody Stephens still works as an A & R guy). For all that, The Idle Wilds take great care not to languish in the shadow of Chilton and Co., turning their amps to 11 and running through a bracing set of originals, like "You're All Forgiven," that acknowledges the past but lives in the present. What more could one ask from a power pop record?

And that rocks our little '90s power pop party to an appropriately exuberant close. This only scratches the surface of all the great pop that's been turned during this fabulous (make that fab) decade. Between big names like Gin Blossoms and Oasis, shoulda-been-bigger names like Material Issue (R.I.P., Jim Ellison), and countless other essential acts you may not know, or may be just barely aware of, the music need never stop.

So don't stop. This is pop with power--music to excite your soul, break your heart, and cause you to drive too fast. It's music best heard, in the words of the late Jim Ellison, with the radio up and the window down. So punch the pedal and crank it up. Feel free to sing along and pound on the steering wheel in whatever rhythmic fashion you can muster. If it's a tale of love lost, don't be afraid to cry. And if it's a power pop celebration, then let the thrills go unabridged. What a wonderful, wonderful time to be a pop fan.

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This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, and on the web at http://sparksyracuse.org/ You can read about our history here.


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Volume 4: CD or download
Waterloo Sunset--Benefit For This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio:  CD or download

Carl's writin' a book! The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1)will contain 165 essays about 165 tracks, each one of 'em THE greatest record ever made. An infinite number of records can each be the greatest record ever made, as long as they take turns. Updated initial information can be seen here: THE GREATEST RECORD EVER MADE! (Volume 1).