The Hoosiers are a band formed with the apparent underlying belief that, in these times of international brouhaha and domestic strife, we all need a good cheering up. This may be true, but I kinda doubt that the gaiety of the nation is gonna be raised by a dude who sings like he's been crowbarred in the balls fronting a Supernaturals tribute band. No matter how many wacky costumes they wear in their video.
There's really only one strong impression that seven or eight listens of The Trick to Life leaves you with: the overriding belief that we need to form a pitchfork-wielding mob, track down Sean Rowley, and deliver instant vigilante justice via some sort of power tool. There's no explanation for why bands like The Feeling, Scouting for Girls, and the assorted selection of muggins here who make up The Hoosiers have decided that the future lies in taking all of the over-bloated blandness of ‘70s AOR radio pop, and none of the, y'know, actual tunes. The chart hegemony this is leading to, where eventually every third top-40 single will sounds like a seventh-generation tape dub of Breakfast In America reformatted for ringtone suitability (i.e.: loud, flat, and with no subtlety of production whatsoever) is beginning to make me nostalgic for the chart glory days of The Horrors, The Others and, I dunno, British Whale.
There's a forced, rictus smile about everything The Hoosiers do, like the faces adults put on around children so they don't realise that their parents died earlier in the day. It's never less than jarring, and when it comes to a song like ‘Goodbye Mr A’, which is meant to be about a near-Fascist 1960s comic book character, just baffling. The level of Virgin Radio Drivetime non-attitude The Hoosiers apply to the topic would convince you that they were singing about Little Plum.
‘Cops and Robbers’ is the world's worst ‘Lovecats’, ‘Worried About Ray’ is the world's worst ‘Happy Together’... and yet it really is preferable that The Hoosiers make their career path from wedding reception band covers because they really go off the rails when left to their own devices. ‘Worst Case Scenario’ being a case in point, an attempt at an indie-du-jour high octane busking number, which sounds like the same sickeningly sweet bullshit that forms the rest of the album, just with a different guitar tone. Frontman Irwin Sparkes, incidentally, really does have some of the most horrid vocals to have achieved a record label contract in a long time, an awful hotchpotch of Justin Hawkins-style wild flailing for high notes and some of the most bogus intrusive rs you'll ever find on a CD.
The whole mess ends with a seven-minute faux-prog piss-about entitled called ‘Money To Be Made’, where Sparkes points out "Keep up the charade / There's money to be made", and it's at this point you realise that not even self-awareness is going to save The Hoosiers. The track fizzles out, unnecessarily, in three minutes of orchestra strings and spaceship noises. As with everything else on ‘The Trick to Life’, there's just no need for it.
Despite their intentions, nobody other than the left-hand side of the bell curve will be left happy by The Hoosiers. Despite all of the tricks, the ‘light-hearted’ song topics, the ‘sly’ lyrics, the ‘cheekiness’ of sound, their wackiness isn't even aggressive enough to be confrontational, like Ween or the Barenaked Ladies or whoever. This is the kookiness of an xkcd comic strip, the kookiness of a joke told in the 23rd minute of a best man's speech, the kookiness of, yes, an office joker. A very polite, socially awkward office joker. The Trick to Life is nothing more than the audio equivalent of a "come in fancy dress" Comic Relief event in the offices of a call centre in a Sandwell industrial estate. And nobody needs that.
Good Review
I cant stand these tits, and is it just me or does he sing 'goodbye mr aids' halfway through their top ten smash? How this album has got to number 1 in the charts i dont know. HOW?!
No
It's "Goodbye Mr. Rape"
I'm positive.
No
definitely Mr Aids.
Biggest Plagiarists
since Elastica.
^
Three Girl Rhumba. Just a plain stupid idea.
Good review. They infuriate me more than most.
awesome review
played with them once. did quite a big sick in my mouth.
spot on
Damn right,these guys suck prime ass. 100% pure filth. How do these guys get away with it?
i've never heard them
on reflection, i dont think i'll bother.
.
Anyone seen the advert for this album? It has a bona-fide funny from the band themselves, instead of the usual joke of jo whiley trying to sound sincere.
Goodbye Mr A
Is a cocking tune and anyone that doesn't realise this is either:
a) deaf
b) stupid
c) deaf and stupid
Only people who fit in categories a)-c) will be excused of the view that this is anything but a massive tune
.
Go buy an ELO best of.
DiS
the one about ray is a good song. thats all i've heard.
i lose more and more respect for DiS every time i read one of these.
Hoosiers
this is on repeat play in our house. yes, I get some of the criticisms, but it is, in fact, a good record. What it certainly does have is tunes. Every single track - like or not - has a catchy tune. The idea that this record and the band themselves are somehow dead inside is just posturing. The music is vibrant, the hooks catchy, just because its successful doesn't mean it's KT Tunstall. Actually, I might quite like KT Tunstall too. On second thoughts - no, I don't.
Bad review
Think Carrie listened to another album. This is WELL worth listening to. Any comment on them plagiarising other bands' songs (The Cure - Radiohead) are naive. The Bends CD has few songs that do not remind me of others - Susan Vega, Steppen Wolf etc, but it's still brill. Take Run Rabbit Run and substitute it for almost any track on OK Computer and that album would still be a classic. This album I know isn't a classic - but it is v v good. If you want complete originality get Mercury Rev's 1st 2 albums and not Deserts Songs
correction
OK sorry - Deserter's Songs - and their first 2 albums are 'Yerself is Steam', and 'Boces'.