Words originally for Outline Magazine
Label: Mom + Pop MusicRelease Date: February 26th, 2016
At
first listen, the debut album from Aussie rockers DMA’s bemuses and mystifies.
How is it that a trio of sun-cooked, bucked hat-adorned lads from down under
have triumphed in creating a record so irresistibly Britpop? And one far more
appealing than their British contemporaries at that; looking at you, Catfish
and the Bottlemen. Timeless leads the retro assault with spacey melodies and
raspy vocals, followed by Lay Down and the acoustic zest/Gallagher swag of
Delete. Step Up the Morphine hits the spot at the midway mark with a dreamy
lull of lo-fi nostalgia. But morphine is probably what you’ll need to sit
through the comedown of Hills End. So We Know signals the end of DMA’s
innovation and drafts in banality instead, as it becomes apparent that they are
just a one trick pony, belters melting into boredom quicker than an ice cream in
the outback sun. Straight Dimensions sounds like alternative Aussie whizz-kid
Courtney Barnett without the deadpan lyrical flare, and as for Blown Away, I’m
definitely not. The Switch is one saving grace, with an airy Suck It and
See-era Arctic Monkeys sound, but it does little to brighten up the end of an
album that goes from promising to promise broken in a matter of minutes.
6/10
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