The Mother Hips broke a long silence with the excellent Red
Tandy EP in 2006 and they maintain the excellence on 2007's Kiss
the Crystal Flake. Always a band you could count on for
fairly straight-forward AOR-influenced rock & roll mixed
with some heart0on-sleeve balladry, the Hips deliver exactly
what you would and expect. A solid batch of rockers and ballads
recorded cleanly and crisply and performed with an energetic,
light touch by the group. The songwriting chores and vocal
duties are split pretty evenly between Tim
Bluhm and Greg
Loiacono with the former providing the sweet vocals and
poppy tunes, the latter grittier vocals and less structured
yet still melodic songs. Their songs blend together almost
as well as their soaring vocal harmonies which give an breathtaking
lift to just about every song on the album. The duo tackle
just about every style of music you might've heard on an FM
rock station in the 70's: hard charging Petty-esque
guitar rock (White Hills, No-Name Darrell), Hall & Oates-styled
blue-eyed soul balladry (Let Somebody), laid-back boogie rock
(Confirmation of Love, White Headphones), Neil
Young-derived ballads (the achingly beautiful Not So Independent)
and semi-soft rock (TGIM, In This Bliss). Even a few you wouldn't
have (the disco vocals Bluhm delivers on TGIM's chorus, the
spiky indie rock guitars of Time Sick Son of a Grizzly Bear).Despite
their obvious debt to the past, any charges of the Mother Hips
being simple revivalist are cast aside by their superb songwriting
and the emotion on display. Even if they were just rip-off
artists, the beauty of their vocal harmonies would make this
record damn near essential for fans of good, sweet and easy
guitar rock. From the 70's or any time at all.