But you have to give props to the SoCal quintet -- with a nod to
Andy Warhol -- for what may be the most
self-effacing and snappiest album title since, well, ever. Ladies
and gentleman, Sugar Ray gives you: 14:59.
"Having had three records, everyone in the band feels like this is
the best we've done so far," says Sugar Ray guitarist
Rodney Sheppard, attempting to defuse the album
title's significance. "We've beaten down the one-hit wonder thing
in our own minds, and now we'll see if everyone agrees with us.
Only time will tell."
Time is certainly Sugar Ray's biggest enemy -- that and the
daunting task of duplicating the success of the juggernaut that was
"Fly." But instead of stressing out, the band members took an
existential approach to this round of songwriting. "The success of
'Fly' and the whole album [Floored] really gave us a lot
of confidence," Sheppard says. "That's why we went for it a little
harder and the subject matter is a little deeper."
"Deep" certainly seems a reach for a group whose lead singer
recently graced the cover of Cosmopolitan as one of
America's most eligible bachelors. Let's just say the new material
may prove to be slightly more "about something." The album's first
single, "Every Morning," which is set to hit radio on Dec. 1,
explores basic relationships between men and women and how a
one-night stand is sometimes unavoidable.
The rest of the album, Sheppard explains, is split between
harmony-laden songs with acoustic guitar, and Sugar Ray's trademark
dance pop. Additionally, Sheppard says listeners can expect a "sort
of Fifties melodic feel set to Nineties drum loops" with a definite
Pet Sounds-meets-the-Fab Four sound.
"We're not trying to sound like the Beatles, but when you're listening to that music, it tends to come out in your own writing," he says. "The album as a whole is a lot more musical than our past work."
For Floored, the band enlisted rapper Super
Cat and his reggae flava to "Fly." That hip-hop-tinged
formula paid enough dividends to have the group go to the well
again and reach out to hip-hop scholar KRS-One,
who raps and sings his own lyrics on "Live and Direct."
In all, 14:59, due out Jan. 19, boasts eleven new songs
and may also include Sugar Ray's version of Steve
Miller's "Abracadabra," which is currently featured on the
soundtrack to Sabriana The Teenage Witch. The band will
embark on a headlining tour on Jan. 15 in support of the new album
unless, of course, the clock strikes fifteen before then.
ARI BENDERSKY(Nov. 11, 1998)
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