In the Northeast, leaves are changing. The air has gone crisp, days
are getting shorter, and it won't be long before college textbooks
are carried with gloved hands. In this climate, it takes little
more than one sloppy power chord to jog loose dormant memories of
underground rock's mid-Eighties rise from the turntables -- and
occasional disc player -- of America's college radio stations. Much
of the noise at the time was being made in collegiate Massachusetts
-- by the likes of now-familiar folks like Juliana Hatfield, J.
Mascis, Evan Dando, Tanya Donnelly and bands like Galaxie 500 and
the seedling Pixies -- as well as the power trio known as Buffalo
Tom.
The band, still comprised of Bill Janovitz on guitar and vocals,
Chris Colbourn on bass and vocals, and Tom MacGinnis behind the
kit, has just released their sixth full-length album,
Smitten, and they'll be hitting the road soon with new
"permanent sideman" keyboardist Phil Aiken, whose playing pops up
all over the new record. Of course, it's a different world out
there. And perhaps one not so kind to guitar bands peddling
pre-Nirvana pop. But that doesn't mean it doesn't strike a chord
anymore. To one way of thinking, Buffalo Tom, now on Polydor after
debuting on legendary SST and putting out the rest of their records
with Beggar's Banquet, are finally ready for their close-up.
"[Beggar's was] very indie, and I think we were ready to say, well,
let's get a little more ambitious," Janovitz says of their recent
label switch. "They had very indie goals, [like], 'You guys are
fine selling this many records.' I think it was really good that we
had that freedom, but I think we've gotten to a point where we're
like, we've done all that stuff. We're confident enough with what
we do that we can invite some other people's opinions and take them
or leave them. And that's sort of what happened with this
record."
For Buffalo Tom, that meant inviting a traditional A&R person
into the picture for the first time ("He told us what he thought,
and we'd tell him what we thought ..."), working with a seasoned
pop producer (Dave Bianco, who manned the boards on Teenage
Fanclub's Grand Prix, engineered for superstar producer
Rick Rubin and picked up a Grammy for his engineering work on Tom
Petty's Wildflowers), and enlisting the sage advice of
Belly guitarist/keyboardist Tom Gorman. The last step, it turned
out, didn't develop beyond a ten-day workshop. But it did lead to
the hiring of Aiken.
"I think [Tom] was a little perplexed as to why we asked him,"
Janovitz recalls. "It was working out for a while, but he pointed
to the fact that what [we] wanted was a traditional keyboardist. 'I
think you think you don't want one, but you do.' And I think he was
right." It was a revelation that quickly propagated a change.
Thumbing through the weekly alternative rag Boston
Phoenix, Janovitz came across an ad that read like the perfect
prescription. "It said something like 'Instead of getting a second
guitarist, why not try me,' and it listed My Bloody Valentine,
Stereolab and the Stones." Aiken picked up the line and the deal
was done. The group was soon gigging and jamming. Eight months
later, they hit the studio to record Smitten.
Wait a second ... Stereolab and My Bloody Valentine? Did we hear
that right?
"We toured with My Bloody Valentine once," Janovitz replies. "I
think we know we're a traditional rock band, but I think we try to
mess with that a bit. We don't want to be an Americana band. I
mean, I love a lot of that stuff that gets classified as that. And,
yeah, I like more experimental stuff. Stereolab's not that out
there. It's kind of loopy. I can hear where I've gotten influenced
by My Bloody Valentine, but it might be via the Stones. I also see
myself taking influences from bands I don't even like. That's why I
try not to listen to that much bad music [laughs]."
Those influences duly noted, Smitten sure sounds like
Buffalo Tom. It is more polished, more lush and layered, peppered
with strings, horns and the like. But the guitar crunch, emotive
vocals and explosive choruses that made the band underground heroes
are in evidence on disc-opener "Rachael" and "White Paint Morning."
And the dead-on balladeer instincts the band served up on Let
Me Come Over are echoed in songs like "Wiser." Which begs the
question: Does Janovitz really think the listening public is ready
for more of the old formula?
"It's all Top 40 and watered down pop," he says of today's music
scene. "I barely even listen to college radio anymore. I can't bear
to sit through a bad song. I can't stand it anymore. Mainstream
radio is just miserable right now."
At which point he adds, "Hopefully they'll play us," and laughs in
spite of himself.
JOE ROSENTHAL
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.