It takes balls to open an LP with a line like, "it was a dark and stormy night." The Wooldridges, Scott and Brian, proceed to string together a bunch more clichés and manage to obtain the critical mass needed to transcend hackneyed images with the Brinsley Schwarz-ish country soul opener "Didn't See It Coming." The rest of the LP of leftovers and cast-offs from their previous three records liberally mixes pop, soul and twang in an equally pleasing way. Think a twangier Marshall Crenshaw, or a poppier Silos, and you'll have a good idea. You might want to throw some Bodeans and Wilco into that mix as well. "Why I Love" has a strong Crowded House vibe and "Lost From Sight" recalls prime Cuddy-sung Blue Rodeo. "Snake Bit" is a jangle-y charmer, while "Counter Culture People" is initially a wee bit twee before it takes off with the entry of the strings. "Fascism On The Radio" sounds like a lost This Year's Model track. It must be nice to have quality stuff like this to collect for your odds and sods LP.
(Independent)Wooldridge Brothers
The Unreel Hits
BY John F. ButlandPublished May 1, 2002