Music

SoundCheck: When the Heavy Breaks

Comments (2)
Thursday, December 17, 2009

You can hear hints of delicious mid-'60s blues-pop in Mambo Sons' music, with obvious influential injections from The Kinks and the Rolling Stones, Elton John and others, but it's also obvious that the band was awake during the '70s and '80s. Its foundation acoustic rhythm tracks invoke Boston and ELO, and its recently-released album Heavy Days has got a few real gems on it.

"Love is Strange" is a gorgeous, simple, vocals-follow-the-acoustic-guitar-melody ditty, and the following tune, "Single City" almost eerily reproduces some of Joe Walsh's finer guitar work (courtesy of guitarist Tom Guerra). "All Men Are Pigs" is a snarky, mock-rock take on Bob Dylan. There's a cover of Jimi Hendrix' "Stone Free," and the title track, "Heavy Days," bears a dedication to recently deceased and much missed Easthampton luthier Frank Lucchesi.

Most of the songs are heavier rockers that feature the skills of singer Scott Lawson's Rod Stewart/Billy Squier-esque bluesy but modern-rock-ready vocal timbre, honed in his other project, cover band Orange Crush. It may not be quite as back-woods-meets-urban-downtown as, for example, Jack White's, but I think that's because Lawson has likely absorbed not only this type of material but also scads of Brit pop, New Wave, So-Cal ska and mushy singer/songwriter stuff as well. The lyrics and rhymes/cadences aren't brilliant, but they're honest enough, and spot on at least 50 percent of the time.

It's bands like these who, were they a tad younger, might evolve into a Staind or a Stone Temple Pilots. Solid drums are provided on the disc by Joe Lemieux, and a few tracks feature Matt Zeiner's truly fluid keyboard skills on piano, Wurlitzer and Hammond organ. Though these guys are primarily a Connecticut band, they've always had at least one foot here in Western Mass., and seem to have at least a part-time obsession with charitable causes, so give 'em a listen.

Heavy Days is available on Omnicide Records and can be found through www.MamboSons.com.

Comments (2)
Post a Comment
Nice Job Mr. Sturm, Mama Mambo must be proud of her boyz - with there 4 records, they have consistently created the best guitar rock and roll in New England, and HEAVY DAYS takes the cake. See them live. If you dare!
Posted by Rod on 12.16.09 at 10:00
I saw them at the Hungry Tiger in Manchester which is a small, local spit-on-the floor type pub and I was amazed at how much how tight they were. If they weren't real men with real jobs they would be huge. They're that talented. It was the best $4 cover I ever spent. Go see them.
Posted by Jim Arace on 12.18.09 at 4:43
Comment:

Name:

Password:

New User/Guest?

Find it Here:
keyword:
search type:
search in:

« Previous   |   Next »
Print Email RSS feed

Nightcrawler: Tongue Twisters and Waggers
Hijos Unicos opt for a more user-friendly moniker; KISS Army storms Mohegan.
CD Shorts
Reviewed this week: Bill Charlap and Renee Rosnes, Stornoway, and Disquiet
Behind the Beat: Friends in Rock
Art in Paradise: And a One and a Two
Polka: it's a whole other world.
CD Shorts
Reviewed this week: Ry Cuming, The Stone Coyotes, and Gitar
Nightcrawler: Body Of Work
Local notables head out to Transperformance XX; rappin' with Skid Row's Rachel Bolan.
Behind the Beat: Acoustic Alchemy
So Glad He Made It
The literally heart-stopping adventures of Northampton singer/songwriter Roger Salloom