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THE OUTLETS
(Hendrix)
People thought it was weird enough when the
Neighborhoods remade their local hit "The Prettiest Girl" for their 1989
major-label debut, a full decade after the original single. But here come the
Outlets, a big 19 years after cutting the local classic "Knock Me Down,"
re-recording that song (and the rest of their old A-list) for an even more
overdue national debut. And it sounds a lot better than you'd expect,
especially if you remember the Neighborhoods remake.
The Outlets haven't tried to reinvent themselves or aim for a crossover hit.
Instead, they've taken this opportunity to document what they've been doing
since the Cantone's days: a lot of sturdy, punkish pop. With original members
Dave and Rick Barton (the latter moonlighting from the Dropkick Murphys) joined
by a new rhythm section, the band sound feistier now than they did on their one
previous album (lately reissued on the local One Way label), which they made
during an acoustic-flavored slump. Dave Barton could always sling a mean hook,
and knew when to let his guard down: "Best Friend" (originally the follow-up
single to "Knock Me Down") was one of the nicer relationship songs to come from
the era that brought us the Nervous Eaters' "Just Head." The handful of newly
written songs sound fine next to the oldies, and the cover of the Carpenters'
"Close to You" is only part send-up. What this has to do with Jimi Hendrix is
anybody's guess, but Hendrix is indeed the label owned by Jimi's family.
-- Brett Milano
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