Radio City RiotRadio City Riot (2007)self-released
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Think back to 1998, as hard as that may be. The Living End were exploding in Australia with their self-titled album and its smash single "Prisoner of Society." Radio City Riot does a superb job throwing us back a decade to that time on their breezy five-song self-titled EP. They're a three-piece; one guy plays an oversized stand-up bass; the lead singer sounds like Chris Cheney; sometimes they throw forward charged gang vocals; there are cool guitar solos and leads sporadically thrown around -- if this isn't total Living End worship, I don't know what is. But boy, do Radio City Riot do it pretty well, and they also do it with that same retro-fitted, Stray Cats-nodding flair.
After a somewhat cheesy opener that tells you exactly what'll it sound like in its title ("Intro: We Are RCR"), the EP leads into "Set Sales, For Nowhere," a solid number that contains all the above. "Kill the Lights" is a bit of a darker tinged number, but it's quite energetic, propelled along by frequent "whuh-uh-oh"s and other repetitively delivered lines that are thankfully catchy rather than annoying. The band charges along at a bouncy, friendly clip too. Wrapping things up are "Enough" and its mild country western twang towards its end, and the decent "London Sun."
Radio City Riot is definitely a solid debut for such a young band, even as much as they wear their influences on their rolled-up sleeves.
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Set Sales, For Nowhere
Kill the Lights
London Sun