NeighborlyGrass Is Greener |
|
SSS010
CD, Digital
2000
Ex-Skiploader (Geffen), Mixed By Mark Trombino
| Name | Time | Popularity |
| 1. | I Concede The Point | 04:45 | ||
| 2. | Bully's Bliss | 03:25 | ||
| 3. | By The Way | 03:10 | ||
| 4. | Flee The Cloud Town | 04:39 | ||
| 5. | Cut To Chase | 02:57 | ||
| 6. | Lisp | 03:36 | ||
| 7. | Golden, Disposable | 03:06 | ||
| 8. | Vandalized | 03:53 | ||
| 9. | Bites Down... | 05:34 | ||
| 10. | Spark And Flash | 04:01 |
| Reviews |
| PopMatters |
As jangle-pop goes, Neighborly aren’t bad. Rather than taking the obnoxious, insensitive route, Grass Is Greener does have some charm and sweetness to it. Unfortunately, it’s mostly ineffectual music. Neighborly do not manage to say anything new or different, and while Grass Is Greener has a certain amount of pleasantness about it, it’s hardly worth the effort to care.
Neighborly’s pop-punk-meets-melody blend of music is catchy and enjoyable, although this enjoyment doesn’t go much deeper than the surface. While frontman Tom Ackerman brings a kindhearted thoughtfulness to his music, it’s mostly lost in uninspired compositions. Neighborly is not trying to deceive listeners or pretend to be better than they are, but their honesty almost isn’t an asset. Grass Is Greener sounds, sadly, like everything else of this sort.
Ackerman’s voice is so open and heartfelt that it’s not hard to wish he was making better music. Slightly cautious and unsure, Ackerman definitely carries Neighborly. Far from over-earnestness, his voice has a certain quality that makes you want to believe in him and listen to him.
Although what he has to say doesn’t really hold up, he keeps Grass Is Greener from being a complete waste.
Lyrically, the songs do show some promise, taking on traditional rock topics from new perspectives. “By the Way” takes the listener through several tales of partying before Ackerman reveals, “I walked home and found out I am old now”. The realization that he can’t stay a teenager forever seems to permeate most of Grass Is Greener. The struggle to deal with adulthood is an interesting one, especially in light of the band’s slightly adolescent sound. While Neighborly do approach the subject, they seem unsure about what to do with it and ultimately fail to bring much insight.
As many good points as Grass Is Greener has, or even attempts to have, it all blurs together, with too many songs that fall neatly into the formulas of drum pounding and guitar clattering. The music feels too generic to be interesting and it’s not that Neighborly are trying to fit it into the standard. They just don’t seem capable of doing anything more than what they are doing.
Neighborly get points for making a good attempt with Grass Is Greener but their music isn’t really anything that stands out from the ordinary.
It’s amiable pop-rock and nothing more.
| In Music We Trust |
Skiploader's front man, Tom Ackerman, began working on Neighborly after Skiploader broke up in what you could easily describe as a messy one. Four years later? Maybe three, the record is finally seeing the light of day. The same emo-driven pop songs that typified Skiploader run ramped in Neighborly.
Ackerman's bittersweet to outright sardonic lyrics rage over jarring indie-rock hooks, giving way to a style of music that could never break into the mainstream without a fluke hit out of left field (hence Skiploader's lack of commercial appeal). However, the ending track, "Spark and Flash," a song about Ackerman's former fan club presidents who died in a car crash coming back from a Weezer show, hints at his ability to write a catchy, solid pop song that is emotional enough to make you want to cry. But, he also manages to keep it catchy enough to warrant you singing along with it, as well as punchy enough to sneak its way into a few hip DJ's play lists, if given the chance.
Grass Is Greener proves that Ackerman is more than a drummer (he is currently drumming for Sunday's Best), but also proves he should work on his craft a bit more before trying to tackle the FM format. Though, Neighborly, if they weren't already dead, could have been one of the cult bands that toured and toured and consistently solid 20,000 records and had legions of fans waiting for them at every tour stop. The songs are powerful, you just need to give them a chance. I'll give this a B.
| Delusions Of Adequacy |
Neighborly is the brainchild of Tom Ackerman, former lead singer and guitarist for the Portland, Oregon-based band, Skiploader, and current drummer for Sunday’s Best. Tom also played drums on, and engineered a good portion of the debut from former Knapsack frontman Blair Shehan’s project, The Jealous Sound. Skiploader disbanded after two full-lengths and one EP, after which Tom attended Loyola University in an effort to improve his recording skills. Neighborly was created when Tom met up with some old friends who had followed his lead and ventured out to California. I had never heard of Tom Ackerman before, so I had no idea what to expect when I first put Grass is Greener into my stereo.
The sound on Grass is Greener is not far from Skiploader’s efforts, with maybe a little more solid pop structure. This could stem from the fact that Mark Trombino (Jimmy Eat World, Boilermaker, Garden Variety, Drive Like Jehu), a studio wizard and friend of Ackerman’s, mixed the album. As a result, the 10 songs that make up Grass Is Greener are quite intelligent and catchy.
Besides the help of Trombino, good songwriting can help too. Ackerman’s lyrics hold your attention with their intelligence and sincerity. “The image was so stunning, you on the concrete running, with your pants down,” Ackerman sings as he welcomes you to the album with the catchy “I Concede The Point.” “Somewhere I’m drunk and toasting, soon to slip into fuzzy regret,” he sings on “Spark And Flash,” immediately gaining your sympathy. And he balances the downtrodden moments with more empowering lines like “Thought opportunity had knocked me off my feet? Here I stand still smiling, sparkling…” in “Cut To Chase.”
The 10 songs that make up Grass is Greener bounce from catchy pop to slightly more straight-ahead rock, keeping you on the fence about whether or not you like it. Then, when the eighth track, and perhaps the highlight of the album, “Vandalized,” comes along, you start to lean a little more towards thinking you like it. Moments later, the album comes to a close with “Spark And Flash,” and you hit play again, realizing you just heard a damn fine album, and you have to listen to it again.
| Splendid |
If I tell you that Neighborly is fronted by Sunday's Best drummer (and former Skiploader frontman) Tom Ackerman, will that give you some idea of what to expect? Yes, you could probably add Neighborly to the long list of "e-word" bands, but I found their sound more tolerable than most; between their melody-intensive, slightly retro-leaning songwriting and Ackerman's better-than-average voice, Neighborly sounds a bit like a younger, angrier Replacements. They're not as whiny and over-wrought as most young bands these days, and their music seems more robust, with more chunky riffs and fewer bland, anemic minor-key melodies. So basically, while Grass is Greener isn't a life-changing experience, you won't mind hearing it more than once.
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