This one's quite a mixed bag, so it's apropos that
Club Wig sounded like differing music artists from song to song. Ostensibly calling Tuscaloosa, AL home they didn't quite fall under the purview of the Mitch Eastern/Don Dixon sound, so I'll gladly give them credit for not hitching their way onto that bandwagon. The leadoff "Monkey Beach" strikes me as the work of a lesser Feelies or Bongos. Not a corker by any means, but often superior to the remainder of this LP. "The Ballad of Abraham Lincoln" folky lilt is loosely in the vicinity of The Donner Party. "How Can You Be So Beautiful" is a chilled out, hammock-swayer of a ditty sung by
Mary Nelson, who splits vocal traipses with the band's more prominent
Robert Huffman. "Not Hers Now" is plaintive yet convincing and could have been
Club Wig's token single. "Gypsy Business'" meter and parlance is strangely similar to that of the band Felt, so much so that a sheer coincidence is unlikely. A faithful rendition of Patsy Cline's "I Fall to Pieces" does little to persuade, or conversely dissuade from the overall effect of the album.
01. Monkey beach
02. The Ballad of Abraham Lincoln
03. Fat
04. How Can You Be So Beautiful
05. Naugahyde
06. Not Hers Now
07. I Fall to Pieces
08. The Pine Villa Romeo
09. No Accident/Johnny
10. Gypsy Business
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