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Seven More Minutes

The Rentals

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Album Review

Somewhere between the surprise success of The Return of the Rentals and the draining tour for Weezer's second album, Pinkerton, the Rentals became more than a side project for Matt Sharp. He wound up leaving Weezer and devoting himself to the Rentals, setting out to record their second record in London in late 1996. With the exception of Kevin March, who replaces Weezer drummer Patrick Wilson, the supporting band remains the same on Seven More Minutes as it does on the debut, but there's a major difference here. Where The Return of the Rentals was a kind of kitschy new wave tribute, Seven More Minutes is designed to prove that this is a real band, capable of all kinds of styles and sounds. To that effect, Sharp lined up an impressive list of guest artists to flesh out the sound even more. Not a bad idea in theory, but there's a problem that a record boasting cameos from Damon Albarn, Donna Matthews, Miki Berenyi, and Tim Wheeler feels something like a Brit-pop hangover. To Sharp's credit, he throws out enough different styles to keep such impressions from solidifying, but that has a countereffect of making the record sound too diffuse, especially on initial plays. With repeated spins, several songs — the dynamic opener "Getting By," the exuberant "Barcelona," the jangling "She Says It's Alright" — catch hold, but the whole project never really gels. It may have been done as a lark, but The Return of the Rentals had a breezy sense of fun that gave it coherence. Seven More Minutes proves that the Rentals are more than just a side project, but it finds them searching for a distinctive identity when, ironically, they had one when they were just a side project.

Customer Reviews

Interesting..

Whoever did the review for this album was spot on. It's exactly how I feel. The Return of the Rentals is, and always will be, the "sound" I think of when I hear the Rentals. It was so perfect. This album isn't bad. I think their first album made a more powerful point than this one. They do seem having identity crisis in this album. The newest album, Songs About Time is just...come on. I will always yearn for more from the band that put out the fuzzy, crunchy, perfect-melody goodness that was found in The Return of the Rentals. But, as with Weezer and many other of my favorite 90's bands, I realize no matter how much I whine and moan, none of them will ever go back to that "sound" that everyone loves from the 90's. The perfect sound of the 90's music scene is gone :( It's so extremely hard to swallow that fact but I have to face it. I miss the good old days...

Long live Matt!

Albums like these bring the 90s into the new generation of music. Definately an album for alternative music lovers. Get this!

Biography

Formed: 1994

Genre: Alternative

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

The Rentals were the new wave-influenced project of singer/songwriter Matt Sharp, former bassist for power pop favorites Weezer. Born in Arlington, VA, on September 22, 1969, Sharp co-founded Weezer in 1992, and in the months to follow, the band emerged as one of the most popular up-and-coming acts on the Los Angeles club scene; their self-titled debut LP appeared on Geffen two years later, becoming a major hit thanks their smash single and video "Buddy Holly." During the spring of 1994, Sharp mounted...
Full Bio

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