The eponymous new album from Californian power pop four-piece Uni Boys is their third for Curation Records and a step up sonically for the band. Formed in high school by chief songwriters Noah Nash and Reza Matin, the band self-released a couple of albums before signing to Curation for their third long player, ‘Do It All Next Week’ and the following ‘Buy This Now!’, which gained attention with the production work of The Lemon Twigs duo Brian & Michael D’Addario.

This time, roping in Lemon Twigs knob twiddler Paul D. Millar, The Uni Boys recorded live to tape in analogue like the old cats did it, and the product of those 2-week sessions is this wonderful 12-track album.

If jangly guitars, multi-layered vocals and sugary sweet melodies are your thing, then Uni Boys have something for you. Lead single ‘I Don’t Wanna Dream Anymore’ is a great starting point for the uninitiated. Killer ’70s-inspired power pop perfection, with a great hook you’ll swear you’ve heard before. Millar’s vocal drawl and the instrumental dynamics bring to mind The Knack, not for the first time and surely not the last.

Album opener ‘Victim Of Myself’ with its infectious bubblegum melodies is Redd Kross on helium, ditto ‘Want You Back’. Elsewhere, the fantastic ‘You’ll Curse His Name Again’ is the epitome of ‘Beatlesque’. Do you catch the theme going on here? It’s all pretty upbeat, it’s all pretty catchy, and every song is a potential single.

The D’Addario brothers’ influence comes through on the likes of the quirky ‘Maybe I’m Wrong’ with its bouncy bassline and sugary sweet chorus, it’s a definite stand out track, and latest single ‘Your So (Phisticated)’ could be the greatest power pop song of recent times, and if not, it’s certainly got the best title! Those layered harmonies are so lush, you’ll be singing that chorus the second time round, and believe me, it won’t leave your brain anytime soon. Silver Sun, anyone? If you know, you know.

Everything about this album reeks of retro 70’s from the album art, the band’s fashion sense, and on to the simple girl meets boy lyrics to the crisp and simple production. I love everything about this record.

They take things down momentarily on a couple of occasions. The emotive ‘Abra’ is sorta dreamy shoegaze pop meets Cheap Trick. The layered backing vocal shines through, and the sublime key change takes it to another place entirely.  The quirky jangle of ‘Genevieve’ sounds like the Lemon Twigs had their way with it, and closer ‘Without A Broken Heart’ inches into Elvis Costello territory to nicely round things off in style.

Uni Boys make uncomplicated, upbeat and catchy power pop music like the last 40 years never existed, and make no apologies for being stuck in a bygone era when things seemed so much….better. This self-titled album is full of memorable hooks, retro throwback vibes and enough goodness for everybody. A step up from previous releases, in this genre, not many bands come close.

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Author: Ben Hughes