Mercury
Crowe – Set Your Mind To Fly
Mercury
Crowe are a straight-ahead rock band. They are straight ahead, though, not in
that their songs lack inventiveness or freshness, but in the sense that they
clearly just want to write good tunes. That’s it. That’s what they’re about.
Don’t expect to see them in Mighty Mighty on a Saturday evening doodling away
at a synthesiser while wearing stovepipe jeans, or flairs, or whatever the hell
it is those indie hipster kids wear these days. No, Mercury Crowe aren’t particularly
keen on following trends, playing retro tunes, or fitting in to any particular
musical style; they simply want to write interesting, bluesy, memorable rock
songs. And they are memorable; they’re damn good songs.
Set Your
Mind to Fly is
their second release, the first being eponymously titled, and the difference
between the two recordings is stark. Mercury Crowe was, to be fair, a perfectly
enjoyable piece of music, but that’s about it. In the two years since its
release, the band has played a whole lot of gigs (more than fifty in 2008
alone) and written a bunch of new songs, and they’ve certainly got their shit
together. The weakest song on Set Your Mind to Fly beats the strongest from their
first recording easily, while the best really hits the spot and then some.
Stand-outs from the album include ‘Pandora,’ a catchy-as-swine flu ballad that
will get in your head and stay there, ‘When the Red Light’s Gone’ (with Ed
Zuccollo of Harbour City Electric guesting on the organ, and the phenomenally
prolific Lisa Tomlins on back-up vocals), and the damn fine ‘The Game.’
To be fair,
not every track on the album is a king-hit winner. But, in order to write this
review, I absolutely thrashed this CD for two days straight, and, remarkably,
I’m not even close to putting it away on my shelf – I think it’ll be staying in
my stereo for some time to come. This, I should perhaps mention, is unusual for
me. In short, at the very least I suggest checking these young men out live
when you get the opportunity (if this year’s gig schedule is anything like
2008’s this shouldn’t be a problem at all), or, better yet, grab a copy of
their beautifully designed, screen-printed and hand-assembled new album.
Michael Hemmingsen – Salient
May 2009