On the
cover of The Mother Hips’ latest album, Pacific
Dust, there’s a painting of a large group of people
cordially interacting, some of them painting what can only be assumed
to be the Pacific Ocean. This seems fitting for music that immediately
conjures thoughts of a golden age in American culture and music:
a time when masses of humanity set out on a pilgrimage to the west,
called by the promise of new beginnings in makeshift hippie utopias.
And though dripping with overtones from the ’60s and ’70s,
there remains enough about Pacific Dust that’s rooted
in the now, in the sonic tapestry of 2009, that may turn this album—the
band’s seventh full length—into its break-through effort.
Throughout
the 11 songs, the Mother Hips walk a line between new and old,
now and then, capably melding sound elements from today with those
of yesteryear. Album opener “White Falcon Fuzz,” could
be straight off of a Weezer album, right down to the fuzzed out distortion
coloring an awkwardly optimistic chord progression. But its softly
slung lyrics and Jimmy Page-like riffing add enough dimensions to
make the song a uniquely Mother Hips’ contraption. The same
blend of contemporary and classic gets used again in “Jess
OXOX,” a saccharin sweet love ballad that could easily share
the stage with Fleetwood Mac or Dinosaur Jr.. “Third Floor
Story” is the most deliberate in its efforts to recapture the
age of classic rock, with angular, projecting guitar riffs that heavily
share DNA with Lenny Kravitz’s sound and intent.
But
more then their interesting experimentation with eras of sound,
at the core of the Mother Hips are very well written songs so easy
on the ear, they demand listening. Mid-album, the infectious ease
of “One Way Out,” “Lion And The Bull,” and “All
in Favor” compel a mindscape of sitting on a warm Cali beach,
watching the waves slowly rolling in and out with no particular place
to be, and no particular desire to be there. And yet, the deceptively
simplistic song structures hide an overall instrumental virtuosity
that resoundingly makes a comeback on “Pacific Dust.” Coy
guitar licks informed by Robbie Robertson and powerful drumming a
la Levon Helm, function to earn this song its rightful role as the
title track, and the group rightful comparisons to The Band.
Founders
Tim Bluhm and Greg Loiacono have been at this for two decades.
In that time they’ve released numerous albums, and have become
practiced at the art of writing irresistibly catchy tunes. Moreover,
their vocal flexibility is remarkable, with neither faltering whether
in need of a raging growl, or dulcet croon fit for lullaby. But even
with so many formulas of success being used, Pacific Dust never
feels formulaic. That is to say, there’s never a sense that
the band employs gimmicks in their efforts to meld their contemporary
sound with classic rock elements. Rather, it all takes place with
a natural ease reminiscent of fellow time machines, the Black Keys
and the White Stripes. But I suspect what’s much more important
to the Mother Hips is that their music puts a smile on your face,
which it will do quite often.