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The Ultrasounds
Good times, great newbies
As I was skimming through the Ultrasounds' press release, a
refreshingly frank quote caught my eye. "People don't
want to hear songs about how bad things suck all the time,"
says lead guitarist Patrick Betzold. "Sometimes people just
want to dance." And that's exactly what I wanted to do
when I saw them a few weeks back at the Barn. Their retro vibe and
dead-on pop sensibility had me thinking, "I can mashed
potato!" But I knew I'd be sorely out of place among all
the cool kids bobbing their heads with amazing restraint.
During the appropriately surf-rock opening act, a demure-looking
girl listened with her hands in the pockets of her hoodie. When
the Ultrasounds' turn came, I was surprised to see her sit down
to play drums. I was even more surprised to see Sara Griffin go
at it with such fervor and even, on occasion, take the lead vocal
as well. Although her mike wasn't quite loud enough at the
show, I got a chance to hear Griffin's sweet voice on their new
album, The Way Things Were. Her girlish vocals are almost twee in
their precious leanings, but their peppiness fits right in with the
band's flashback aesthetic. Matched up with Betzold's
catchy, slick riffs on songs like "Why Don't We Leave?"
Griffin's voice almost makes one wonder why she isn't the
lead singer.
But Christopher Smith's versatility shines through on the
album, proving that he's right where he belongs. On "You
Don't Even Know" he sounds like a less whiny Ben Folds.
And if it weren't one of the biggest clichés in music
reviews, I'd say he occasionally channels a young Paul McCartney,
especially when he puts a bit more force into it and lets his voice
crack a little. (At their show, he even wore a jacket that
wouldn't be out of place on the Sgt. Pepper cover.)
Get ready for another faux pas: "The Easy Way Back,"
my fave track on the album, is downright Beatlesque. It occurs to
me, as I listen, that The Way Things Were is an apt title, not only
because it conjures the sounds of the sixties but also because it
acknowledges its own nostalgia.
Much as the Ultrasounds encourage virtual time travel, I'm
reminded of the great cultural critic Fredric Jameson's injunction
to "Always historicize!" To put these musicians where
they belong in the twenty-first century perhaps it
would be more accurate to say they're
British-Invasion-meets-early-aught-years-indie-pop: think an edgier
version of the Strokes, or the Libertines' first album. The
aesthetic may be old, but it's still hip, man and totally
cravable.
The Ultrasounds are at the Club Above on Saturday, August 2, and
at TC's Speakeasy on Saturday, August 30.
Katie Whitney
Photo by Henry Griffin
[Review published August 2008]
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