The Clarks: Fast Moving Cars
Published July 15, 2004
Friendly, artful pop-rock is a deceptively tough style to pull off. Pittsburgh stalwarts The Clarks manage it nicely, thanks to a happy combination of strong songwriting, chunky riffs, rich harmonies and earnest but unpretentious lead vocals.
The CD is front-loaded with three of its best songs. The opening track is an ode to the open road (The Clarks aren't reinventing any wheels, so to speak, with their subject matter) while "Anymore" and "Shimmy Low" celebrate cutting loose from bad relationships and personal demons. All three songs have superb radio-friendly hooks. "Wait a Minute" shows they can write a catchy mid-tempo ballad too, even if the words don't make too much sense.
Most of the rest are in the same vein but weaker, though the band's knack for melody never abandons them. Even their less nimble numbers please the ear thanks to sweet harmonies and optimally dense production.
"Fast Moving Cars," a sparkling, James Taylor-esque folk-rocker, varies the formula and shows the band's versatility. On the other hand, although Scott Blasey's voice at times sounds a bit like Billie Joe Armstrong's, "You Know Everything" proves that The Clarks are not at their best trying to punk out like Green Day. "Gypsy Lounge," a 1960s-style jangle-rocker (think The Zombies or America), is much better. And the CD closes with the Dylan-esque "Train," an emotional story of going off to war which evinces the band's deeper side.
If this CD doesn't break The Clarks nationally, it won't be the music's fault. All the goods are here.
- The Clarks: Fast Moving Cars
- Published: July 15, 2004
- Type:
- Section: Music
- Filed Under: Music: Rock
- Writer: Jon Sobel
- Jon Sobel's BC Writer page
- Jon Sobel's personal site
- Spread the Word
- Like this article?
- Email this
Save to del.icio.us
Comments
does any1 no billie joes sn? if u do plz IM me or emailme . Sk8rGiRlY9762 is my sn


Jon Sobel is Blogcritics' theater editor, reviews NYC theater frequently, and writes a regular round-up of independent music releases. He is also a computer professional, musician, and small-time concert promoter in New York City. (His original band, 



Great review. I agree and I understand where you might want to compare Scott with Billie Joe Armstrong. Listen to the Clarks entire catalog to find out more about them and their songs. It will be worth your time and you'll soon discover the comparison is just a crossing of paths vocally. I recommend their 1991 self titled cd "The Clarks".
Keep it going,
John