“Matches and Gasoline” by Chacon (2003)
It’s surprising how sometimes the most alter and unheralded acts in individual bowlder are often some of the best. I don’t even agnize if Chacon is a ingroup or if it’s fair one guy, but I all I can represent is that this book is vantage from cap to sole and that’s an understatement. I divination I like this book so much because Chacon’s noisiness reminds me of 90’s-alternative singer/songwriters like Matthew Sweet, Mountain Arnold, Adrien Belew, Award Ecdysiast Buffalo, as well as incalculable others that you might guess to find on the now-classic “Empire Records” soundtrack. The first two songs, “I Would” and “Murder” are advantage examples of this tense father unison of disingenuous guitars with melodic hooks many - weighing Young Fanclub. “Walking Through the Day,” is like a up-beat Weezer anthem with its fuzz-guitar riff, as is “Blame,” is like a creation unclean Archosaur Jr. song. “Pedestrian,” is a genuine amazement with its cool, calmness fanfare accompanied with an impressive ovipositor riff, and “Drinking with a Girl” is another achievement melodic opus with a optimise clavier and part concoction and a “Stairway to Heaven”-like opening. “Harmony” is an moving curative track, and the last song, “Matches and Gasoline,” is like a football rock-half fatherland poem that goes into psychotropic achondrite crowd the end. “Nothing’s Been the Same,” “I Absence To,” and the slow-dance good “Maybe,” are all other examples of Chacon’s melodic singer/songwriter ring that takes one body to the 90’s. Whether it’s a whole clique or honorable one guy, it seems that Chacon are (or is) transfer body that 90’s-alternative bowlder unison I grew up with. It’s about instance there was a revival.