Minus 5's new disc, Down With Wilco (Yep Roc) has been grabbing a good deal of critical attention since it was released two weeks ago - and understandably so. The ad hoc group (a side project for singer/guitarist Scott McGaughey) is primarily composed of members of this year's pop critical darlings, Wilco, while the disc's periodic strange piano and guitar sounds often recall that group's Nonesuch disc, Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, which has topped many a pop critic's best-of list for 2002. Small wonder this disc's getting plenty of play; in some music stores it's even being sold in bins as a new Wilco release.
Fans of Pacific Northwestern garage denizens the Young Fresh Fellows (myself included) will have a different take on the matter. For us, this is one of McGaughey's ongoing low-key pop-rock projects away from the YFF: the previous Minus 5 outing, Let the War Against Music Begin, was included in a two-disc jewel case alongside the Fellows' last release Because We Hate You. Both discs were packaged as a mock battle-of-the-bands with the listener given a score card on the inner jewel box sleeve to rate each track.
I've been a McGaughey/Young Fresh Fellows fan since the early days of the Comedy Channel and the Higgins Boys & Gruber (their show had a theme song composed by the group). A working band since 1982, YFF specializes in ramshackle rock characterized by nuggety proto-psychedelic guitar, endearingly awkward vocals and smart-guy lyrics. An ideal band for college radio in the mid-eighties, where they had cultish play through tracks like "Amy Grant" (a funny soulful put-down of the Christian songstress). But what first hooked me was the sight and sound of the band's video for a track from its '89 release This One's For the Ladies (Frontier Records), a remake of Ray Davies' "Picture Book." Somebody doing a cut from Village Green Preservation Society? The Kinks kultist in me was immediately intrigued.
YFF has released something in the neighborhood of seven CDs, and while some of 'em can be undeniably spotty, I play each one regularly. (But, then, I've also been known to pull out my copies of Preservation - Parts One & Two more often than they deserve, too.) Most solid items in the discography? The Men Who Loved Music (from whence came "Amy Grant," but I also love nerd anthem "When the Girls Get Here," too), Ladies plus Electric Bird Digest (all released on Frontier Records). 1992's Low Beat Time plants the group within a chronology of great Pacific Northwest rock bands by including two songs recorded in the same no-track studio that the Sonics used to record sixties garage classics like "Strychnine" and "Psycho." The results are predictably ragged, but cooler than anything the Hives have yet recorded.








Article comments
1 - The Theory
very nice. very nice.
peace.
2 - The Theory
yeah, it would kind of frustrate me to see Down With Wilco filed under Wilco instead of The Minus 5... (the same way Jay Bennett's solo cd was, just because he used to play with wilco)... however, from a store's perspective they would probably make more sales by putting it under wilco instead of the minus 5...
peace.
3 - Onz
That was very sad when HB & G dindt make it over to comedy central He what was the name of that Young Fresh Fellows song they used for the theme? anyone? bueler?