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Love-Cars (left to right) Alex Gaddis,
James Diers, Matt Foust, and Dave King
CMJ New Music Monthly April 2000 "Like
Semisonic's Dan Wilson, Love-cars singer James Diers has
an invitingly affable voice that gives even the prickliest
of sentiments a polished, radio-ready sheen. For a band
that is as ambitious (and given to writing tunes that routinely
clock in around six or seven minutes) as this Minneapolis
foursome, that streak of accessibility is probably a good
thing. Furthermore, Love-cars' sophomore outing ably balances
the band's penchant for expansive instrumental interplay
and darkly dramatic hues ("Now We're Even") with more straightforward
pop hooks ("Man of the Month").
The band's lyrics range from dealing with
the tangled emotional yearning of adolescence ("Stammer";
"Call Me Sometime, Best Friends Forever"), with Diers undercutting
tension with tenderness and vice-versa, to getting a little
worked up about pop-star packaging. The album opener, "24,"
finds Diers delivering this succinct little salvo: "Elevator
anthems are all the rage/They have no scent I can detect/But
they seep out on each airwave." As if that weren't enough
to submarine the band's chances of ever being introduced
by Casey Kasem, the track unravels at a snail's pace that
suggests what would happen if the Red House Painters dropped
a few downers with 764-Hero and let the tape roll. Now that's
guerilla radio."
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