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Lucky

Nada Surf

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Album Review

If Fountains of Wayne create snarky power pop songs for Friday evenings, then Nada Surf is the band for Sunday afternoons. They've grown more emotive over the years, having replaced the sarcasm of 1996's "Popular" with a grown-up focus on pop songcraft and mellow instrumentation. And they've been lucky, too — lucky in that their audience has remained, their (once rocky) label situation has steadied, and their chops have improved. Appropriately enough, Lucky sounds like a celebration of the band's good fortune. Somber songs are still present, most notably the plaintive closer "The Film Did Not Go 'Round," but most of the album is dominated by steady, mid-tempo pop/rock. Nada Surf spent the first half of the 2000s making subdued rainy day records, which makes Lucky seem downright sunny (if not supernova bright) in comparison. There are some particularly luminous moments here, including the back-to-back punch of "Whose Authority" and "Beautiful Beat," where the songs immediately unleash their hooks and sustain that energy for minutes. "Beautiful beat, get me out of this mess; beautiful beat, lift me up from distress," sings Matthew Caws, sounding restless and happy at the same time, as if he knows his anxiety can be quelled at any moment by the sounds of his brightest record to date. But Lucky never gets lost in that sort of happiness. Nada Surf has seen too much over the past 15 years not to be cautious, and the leadoff track "See These Bones" warns younger bands to be similarly careful with their careers. "Look alive, see these bones," the lyrics advise. "What you are now, we were once — and just like we are, you'll be dust." As the song ends, three different melodies weave themselves together, all of them instantly memorable and worthy of being a chorus in their own right. So even when Lucky tries to turn down the glow, it still radiates with the oomph of a solid power pop release, making Nada Surf's fifth album a fine finale for a weekend well-spent.

Customer Reviews

Know before you go

This is a great album. Easy, listenable and at times delicately intricate. It's the prefect next step in the continuous progression of a great band. Highly recommended. *BUT* If you buy the LP on iTunes, you'll be missing out on a 4 song EP packaged with the initial release of Lucky. I love iTunes, but you may want to go support your neighborhood record store on this one (not to mention, Nada should be heard in the highest possible fidelity - not just 192K). Either way: buy it, enjoy it and tell your friends.

Great but not what i expected!

I am a huge nada surf fan. This album was a shock to me. I did not like it the first time i listened to it. It felt really cheesy and not what i expected of them. After listening to it again it is the same classic nada surf but with a mature twist to it. If you are looking for a high low album you wont find it here. You will find a great pop rock album with song that you can;t get out of your head.

Let Go? No. Great? Yes.

I could spend the entire review talking about "See This Bones." The song starts out simple enough and continues building momentum. After the chorus is repeated for the third time, it sky rockets building layer upon layer. I thank my (lucky) stars that it's 5+ minutes. I'm not sure why this was selected as the first track because it's a show stopper. In fact, the album is a bit front-loaded with the following song being another highlight, "Whose Authority." As always, Nada Surf rides the fine line between happy and sad wihtout ever being too sweet or boring. They consistently produce great pop music that has thought put into it. There was a definite shift after 1998's The Proximity Effect that carried through into The Weight is Enough. This is more along those lines but is a bit more experimental with some of the instrumentation. They still enjoy momenets where they just allow the instruments do the singing and simply add signature "oohs" and "ahhs." It seems like everyone that hears them wonders how they aren't more...popular. I just feel...fortunate...that they've continued making excellent music, have continued evolving, and didn't let their one big hit allow them fade into obscurity.

Biography

Formed: 1993 in New York, NY

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '90s, '00s, '10s

Once in danger of being relegated to "one-hit wonder" status, Nada Surf soldiered onward after the success of 1996's "Popular," following up a brief residence on the Billboard charts with a slew of solid power pop albums. Founders Matthew Caws (vocals, guitar) and Daniel Lorca (bass) were longtime school friends, having studied together at the Lycée Français de New York in Upper Manhattan. After Lorca spent some time abroad in the late '80s, the two reunited after graduation to form Because Because...
Full Bio
Lucky, Nada Surf
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