Harvey Danger
KING JAMES VERSION
(London)
Harvey Danger, the
Seattle quartet that scored a major modern-rock breakthrough with the single
"Flagpole Sitta" on their debut CD, are back with King James Version,
another rousing and irreverent collection of smartly barbed guitar-driven pop
songs. Singer/guitarist Sean Nelson hasn't lost his knack for delivering
cleverly loaded lines like "I told her that everything she does is divine/And
she replied with a blank expression" ("Why I'm Lonely") with disarming charm.
He's no one-shtick pony -- "Meetings with Remarkable Men," which name-drops
Jesus, Morrissey, and Kip Winger, does reprise the fuzz-box stomp of "Flagpole
Sitta." But the band shift gears for the stripped-down melancholy of "Pike
Street/Park Place," a piano-based ballad that finds Nelson revealing a more
sensitive side. A '60s-style organ hook opens "Sad Sweetheart of the Rodeo"
before giving way to some Pixiesish guitar racket augmented by smooth
background harmonies. "(Theme from) Carjack Fever" features an odd barrage of
imagery ("The moon is a toenail/The stars are a guardrail/My heart is a
sandpail") and a recurring melody that recalls the theme from Mystery
Science Theater 3000. Nelson's verbal potshots can be a little caustic
(check the rant that closes "Authenticity"), but you don't have to agree with
what he's saying to enjoy the hooks, melodies, and unbridled enthusiasm that
cut through King James Version.
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