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Mad Staring Eyes: Bored of Looking Cool LP

July 12th, 2008 by stv

Mad Staring Eyes onstage at Reverb in Toronto at NXNE
When I stumbled across London’s Mad Staring Eyes mid-way through their set last month at North by Northeast, I thought to myself that I’d discovered the new kings of pub rock. When bass player Dan Lee handed me a copy of Bored of Looking Cool, and I saw they have a track called “King of Pub Rock,” I figured I wasn’t alone in my opinion. They’re also one of the few bands I’ve ever seen to list Ian Dury as an influence, so there you go.

Like their predecessors in the genre, MSE play straight-up rock with a raucous attitude. They’ve got a great bunch of tunes on this disc, however this recording comes a little short of capturing the band’s frenetic live energy. It does, however, do a rather nostalgic tip of the hat to the heyday of pub rock simply due to the fact that it sounds like it could’ve been recorded in the early ’80s (the dated keyboard textures on tunes like “Out of my Head” definitely drive that point home).

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Posted in Reviews

the gitpop podcast: June 23rd, 2008

June 23rd, 2008 by stv
the gitpop podcast     

Episode #1: North by Northeast

An audio recap of my NXNE experiences featuring tracks by The Books Elusive, Run with the Kittens, Mad Staring Eyes, Grace Emilys, Monotonix, and The Travelling Band, plus an interview with Grand Analog!

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Posted in Podcast

NXNE Preview: The I Spies

June 13th, 2008 by stv

Photo of The I Spies by David Wladman - FormerTransformer.com
Interviewing Toronto’s The I Spies was one of the more surreal experiences I’ve had leading up to North by Northeast. On a three-way call with singer/guitarist/keyboardist Johnny Kay (in his kitchen “cooking up a whole mess of farfalle pasta”) and lead guitarist/singer/keyboardist James Roberston (on his cell being chauffeured around town), I found myself in the middle of an arsenal of snappy one-liners and in-jokes that one might expect from a comedy troupe.

That’s not to say that their music is a joke by any stretch of the imagination. The I Spies deliver powerful guitar-fueled pop songs reminiscent of the early days of new wave (Television, not Culture Club). With energy to spare and hooks galore, their debut album, In the Night, stands as testament to a local act ready to take on the world.

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Posted in Features