Test Spins: Lucky
February 7, 2008 - 1:00amSince their 1996 cult hit “Popular” hit radio stations back when FM was good, Nada Surf has proven time and again they aren’t just another Marcy Playground. On Lucky, the band’s latest release, guitarist and vocalist Matthew Caws croons about loneliness and lost love. The album’s breadth and sonic dynamism keep Caws’ lyrics from sounding, well, too much like the One Tree Hill soundtrack. On the upbeat “Ice On The Wing,” a seemingly out of place brass section calmly brings the track to a close. The next song, “The Fox,” opens with an eerie and uber-reverberated guitar rift that ends with a healthy dose of jumbled string and guitar. One cannot help but feel simultaneously disoriented and satisfied. Sure, the band has filled its trademark for supreme catchiness with “Weightless” and “I Like What You Say.” But Nada Surf’s flair for the eclectic ensures that Lucky is their most interesting album to date.

Oh come on, Marcy Playground
Oh come on, Marcy Playground rocks. Most people consider both of them "one hit wonders" (a term I detest, which is always thrown around by people with very narrow ideas of the music industry), and I bet their fans are as annoyed by that as Marcy Playground's fans. Both bands have a significant number behind them, continuing to buy the albums they continue to put out. I'll tell you one thing- a hell of a lot more people remember Marcy Playground than Nada Surf, and they remember them with love. People *still* make reference to Sex & Candy. ;)