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Magoo: Pop Songs
What they lack in the understandings of plastic conservation, it seems, the make up for linguistically through the glorious Ronsil-like simplicity of that title. For mere seconds into the brightly-toned fairground-rush of opening tune ‘robot twin’ the listener will surely realise that, yes, these are pop songs, pop songs untainted of the usual elitist grumbles like marketing strategies and wardrobe consultants, pop songs that will make you want to sing the riffs and hug the sky and proclaim Magoo as quivery-kneed and rightful indie glee royalty. Does. Exactly. What. It. Says. On. The. Tin.
That, however, is a result of CD1 being a collection of the more amped-up and, if they were peddling this sort of magic four decades ago, presumably amphetamine-fuelled guitar stormers. Aside from the riffs, though, it’s that voice of Andrew Rayner that stands out, crooning with a near-soprano jab “We’re ahead of the pack” on the stop-start majesty of ‘laser light fury’, as if trying to contain himself amidst such a flurry of psycho-delica. The band work well on the whole variation-on-a-theme deal during ‘silver surfer’, veering as it does between slick handclaps / wordplay and mammoth choruses, whilst ‘we’re not superhuman’ fills us with the same sort of joyous belief in big-hearted, feedback-drenched guitar pop as, for instance, listening to Distophia on the last day of term.
CD2, due to its billing as the ‘acoustic’ songs, momentarily gives us the sense that this is where they could perch on stools, go all Dad-rock and balls up a collection that started with such power. Then there’s the realisation that this is Magoo we’re talking about, so it doesn’t. As you could possibly imagine, some of it is a recorder solo away from being as twee as a forest with a speech impediment (check the lyrics about how the specified girl is “as pretty as a flower” on ‘radio shack’) but all with a sense of sincerity and a fair few moments of upbeat jangling and melancholic reflection (‘trust to love’ isn’t a million miles away from a Fisher Price approximation of Low - that’s a compliment by the way…) in equal measure.
Add to that a slightly shanty-ish version of a Guided By Voices track and you have, if we’re being so bold as to suggest it, the most accomplished stop-gap two-disc mini-album this year thus far. My personal vote would go to CD1, but on the whole this release is a genuine cause for delight. Hurrah!
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Magoo - Pop Songs
Hurrah indeed !
One of the best bands of the last 10 years come back ! -
Magoo - Pop Songs
Great scott! double album. spoiling us :D like the chocolates. mmmmmagooo -
Magoo - Pop Songs
hurrah indeed! they are playing at norwich UEA on mothers day (6 march) if interested. its only four of the queen's pounds. i'm going cos they're making me carry their badges and frisbees.... -
Magoo - Pop Songs
I was going to add my twopenneth. Then I thought I'd just add a review I wrote for a regional listings magazine, because I'm too lazy to type. Hah.
Drink in the juice of my self-indulgence...
Magoo aren’t just a local institution. They’re transglobal, pangalactic conquistadors, who, having recently ambushed The Flute Asteroids in a hail of raygun fire, could well be the most innovative band on the planet. Which planet is anyone’s guess, but it’s a moot point oft overlooked by (Nor)folk.
And, although they’ve been around forever, The Magoo Idea Jacuzzi shows no signs of debubblifying. This, their latest (mini)LP sees the sextet in effect spawn non-identical twin EPs. The admittedly ex-box thinking behind this dubious attempt at family planning is slightly muddied. In theory, it states: ‘look at us! We’re an eclectic schizobeast of sonic love! We do, like, LOUD and (quiet)! And we can tell the difference!’ In practice, it reads thus: ‘one brilliant, brilliant Magoo EP. One diluted, oft-mesmeric, sometimes frustrating Magoo EP.’
But when they abandon such notions of self-censorship and do what they do best - radiant, charming unashamedly POP songs stumbling harmonically through a murky netherworld of squally synths, torrential drums and weird noises – EP1 – conceptual follies are instantly forgotten. Opener ‘Robot Twin’ condenses and surpasses the entirety of the Boo Radleys’ sprawling protoBritpop meisterwerk Giant Steps in two-and-a-half minutes. Elsewhere huge melodies play footsie with things that go whooshplinkjangle whilst drums stampede over the resulting melee.
It’d be churlish to suggest that the more subdued, introspective EP2 doesn’t possess moments of disarming loveliness: ‘Radio Shack’ skips along in a twinkly cocoon of gossamer acoustica and a rejig of Guided by Voices’ ‘Chicken Blows’ veers down dirtroads into Sparklehorse Country. Too often, however, a benign tweeness prevents Popsongs from emulating the consistently stunning Realist Week and keeps it in the realm of the merely very nice.
To rephrase rhetorically: why have a car with corduroy seats when you can have a carbomb with corduroy seats?-
Re: Magoo - Pop Songs
hehe...well said.
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