**1/2 Goo Goo Dolls
DIZZY UP THE GIRL
(Warner Bros.)
It's easy to resent Buffalo's Goo Goo Dolls for having achieved
phenomenal commercial success with a sound that never brought the Replacements
anything more than critical acclaim. But then, nobody ever choked under
pressure like the Replacements (except, perhaps, Paul Westerberg's hero, Alex
Chilton) -- certainly not the more well-adjusted Goo Goo Dolls. And the
pressure was surely on this time: having already scored a massive midsummer hit
by putting Dizzy's "Iris" on the City of Angels soundtrack, the
Goos had to come up with at least one or two more good reasons for fans to buy
their sixth album (which, of course, features "Iris"). So singer/guitarist
Johnny Rzeznik puts on his best "Here Comes A Regular" voice, which is sounding
more and more like Tommy Stinson's Westerberg imitation every album, and croons
sentimentally about a "young man sitting in an old man's bar waiting for his
turn to die" on the plaintive "Broadway," gets all clumsy and romantic about a
girl named May on the hooky "Slide," and then falls for the girl that "a
thousand boys could never reach" on the semi-acoustic ballad "Black Balloon" (a
string-embellished song aching to be "Aching To Be"). Let's just say that
"Iris" fans won't be unsatisfied.
-- Matt Ashare
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