Genre: Pop Rock
Label Number: CD 83616
© 2003 Atlantic Records
AllMusic Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
© 2003 Atlantic Records
AllMusic Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Do you want proof that Sugar Ray
are smarter, or at least savvier, than they seem? They not only
abandoned funk-metal the second they had a hit with the breezy "Fly,"
they ran with their newfound success, turning into the sunny, good-time
summertime band that American pop radio desperately needed in the bleak,
self-absorbed aftermath of grunge. Thing was, they were much better as a
pop band than a rock band; although they could occasionally hit a
rocker out of the park, as they did on the punky power pop of "Answer
the Phone," they felt more comfortable when they laid back and let the
hooks speak for themselves, something they felt increasingly comfortable
doing with each successive album, culminating in their first-rate 2001
eponymous record. That was a clean, straightforward pop album, working
within the mainstream tradition and sounding surprisingly timeless in
many ways. Its 2003 successor continues in the pop vein, but it tries to
be a more contemporary version of that album, overloaded with modern
drum beats and loops and processed guitars. Often, this is merely
window-dressing on a good pop song, but sometimes it overwhelms the
track if there are no hooks there -- as it does, ironically, on the
album's first single, "Mr. Bartender (It's So Easy)." So, it's not as
consistent as Sugar Ray,
stumbling on occasion, but it does deliver some great guilty pleasures
-- the opening "Chasin' You Around"; the sweet "Heaven"; the rocker "In
Through the Doggie Door," which redeems its title; the excellent cover
of "Is She Really Going Out With Him?," where vocalist Mark McGrath precisely mimics the tone, timbre, and phrasing of Joe Jackson; and, finally, "Blues From a Gun," where they appropriate a Jesus & Mary Chain title and come up with a song that's pretty much the polar opposite of the Mary Chain.
It all adds up to another winning record by a band who has proven to be
far more resilient than anybody could have guessed when "Fly" flew to
the top of the charts in 1997.
tags: sugar ray, in the pursuit of leisure, 2003, flac,
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