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Dr. DogTakers and Leavers(Park the Van) US release date: 12 September 2006 UK release date: Available as import by Steve HorowitzThese Philadelphia boys have earned a cult reputation because of their DIY ‘60s-style psychedelic atmospherics. They deliver self-consciously silly, pseudo-intellectual lyrics, often in three-part vocal harmony backed by clanging tambourines, pounding drums, and tasty electric guitar riffs and/or a melodic piano. Five guys and six songs equals 23½ minutes of rambling, lo-fidelity pop. The EP is fun in a goofy way. The disc is reminiscent of making up lyrics and singing along to an oldies station while driving up and down mountains as the reception fades, comes back strong and fades again. Strains of the Beach Boys and the Beatles are certainly evident on the EP, but Dr. Dog’s refusal to take things seriously gets wearying. Sure, the earnestness of Brian Wilson and George Harrison can be hard to take. These old hippies make easy targets. Dr. Dog is best when playing things straight and seem to know it. The final minute and half of the last song, “Livin’ a Dream”, asks the listener to live in the present instead of romanticizing the past; to learn from history rather than just buy into it uncritically. Right on.
Dr. Dog - Fools Life 10 November 2006Related articles
Review: Dr. Dog: FateJoe Tacopino17.Jul.08 America's favorite nostalgia rock act is back with more '60s pop revivalism.
Review: Dr. Dog: We All BelongJoe Tacopino27.Feb.07 Philadelphia's psych-pop darlings issue a more polished version of their '60s-influenced sunshine pop.
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