Unlikely Friends – Solid Gold Cowboys

Solid Gold Cowboys is the debut album from Unlikely Friends, a band formed by David Crain of BOAT, Charles Bert of Math & Physics Club, and Chris Mac of various things. They make an infectious brand of indie pop that sounds sort of like Guided by Voices, sharing the songwriting. As Crain explains:

“We are trying to make the ultimate pop album….Charles has got a really good voice…and I sound like a muppet….so it is kind of a Paul Simon and Kermit the Frog-funkel feel. We each wrote half of the 13 songs for SOLID GOLD COWBOYS. 6.5 for each of us…he wrote lyrics on one of my songs, and I on one his.”

In a way, Solid Gold Cowboys deals with the same sort of issues that Mike Pace described on his recent album Best Boy, comparing golden dreams with the insipid reality. But whereas Pace was singing with a longing for the promises of the 80s/90s, Unlikely Friends are more concerned with the present, singing about the banality of modern existence in a land where the Good Ol’ American Dream is a plastic model of an empty smile. This is captured perfectly in the first song, ‘Ride off into the Sunset’, where a normal man harbours dreams of cowboy freedom:

“I’m a twenty-first century American male,
I make a wheezing sound when I exhale,
I’ve got a supercharged chevy that I built myself,
it sits in my garage and has a musty smell.”

‘Soft Reputation’, the lead single, continues this trend with a video that manages to capture the essence of America with a compilation of baseball clips and adverts, a mixture of silly details and the very real glory of victory. This focus on silly but relatable details is a feature of the album (e.g. ‘Pizza Crust Trust’ – “you ate all of the pizza, except for the crust”), as are comments on the unsatisfying freedom felt by middle-class Americans (e.g. ‘Golden Telephone’ – “You can go anywhere that you want, there’s nothing here you really need”).

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Od87yGQzQg4]

Of course, with this type of music the lyrics are only there for those who really want to listen. Others will sit back and bathe in the feel-good vibes. ‘Satellite Station’ and ‘Golden Telephone’ are breezy summer hits, shoegaze numbers with the fuzz removed, ‘Please Lorraine’ a big catchy love song with the melodramatic power-pop refrain, “Please Lorraine, pick up the pieces, make them whole again”. ‘Gold Hills Theme’ adds a spaghetti Western jangle (a hole in the pop market, I believe) and closer ‘Gold Coat Marauders’ again pines for a vision of America that has disappeared or maybe never existed. “Pull me up, dust me down and take me to the place where I thought I was from”.

You can grab the the cassette from Mirror Universe Tapes, the CD from Jigsaw Records or download a digital copy from the Unlikely Friends Bandcamp page.