Monday, May 11, 2026

"Look For Your Mind!": The Lemon Twigs Are Bigger, Better And Smarter


 

 

The Lemon Twigs' new one, "Look For Your Mind!" had me right out of the gate with the title cut, a brilliant homage to one of my favorite Who songs, "Disguises." By the end of track three, I had to stop, take a breath and start all over again. That third track "Nothin' But You" finds Michael D'Addario channeling Alex Chilton on a jangler that could have been on Big Star's "Radio City." That would have been enough, but they tag on the Raspberries' "Overnight Sensation" coda as this song's coda and well, I needed to hear it all over again.

Yes, I am gushing, and at the time of this writing, I've only heard the first three songs, twice. But I can't think of an active band or artist that manages to push all of my pop music buttons they way these kids do. 

Okay, back to the record. 

I've just listened to four more songs, including one called "Gather Round" that has a Jellyfish vibe, and the next stunner "Fire & Gold," which stopped me again. At this point I need to stop trying to figure out what I am hearing and just listen. It's fun to recognize chord changes, or quoted bits from older songs, like a nod to Todd Rundgren's melody on "Road To Utopia" in "Fire & Gold." But The D'Addarios are so good at calling up the past, whether in a production trick like phasing on a guitar, or a simple call and answer vocal from a 60's classic, it hardly matters where you first heard it. I'm thrilled to be hearing it all again in a fresh context.  

This isn't Rutles parody. The Lemon Twigs know better. This is hours and hours of playing records and proving it wasn't a waste of time. 

"Paul's Boutique," the Beastie Boys masterpiece, is said to have sampled between 100-150 songs. There is no sampling on this record. The D'Addarios have hundreds of their favorite songs in their heads that they seem to effortlessly call back whenever they deem necessary. 

Contrived? I don't hear it that way. It's been working thus far, so I have no issue with it now, especially when every Tom, Dick and Chilton wannabe power pop band releases the same weak Beatles meets Big Star record over and over again. The Lemon Twigs songwriting is miles ahead of most in their field and if they feel like winking and nudging their production with obvious references to Brian Wilson or Pete Townshend, more power to them.

If "Everything Harmony" was their folk rock record and "A Dream Is All We Know" was their sunshine/power pop record, "Look To Your Mind" feels like a deliberate tip of the hat to both Big Star and the Raspberries. I keep hearing both bands. Whether it's Michael doing that Eric Carmen scream or using chord changes from "I Can Remember," from the Raspberries debut, or the Ardent Studio tone of the guitars, "Look For Your Mind!" is a triumphant affair and should please not just fans of the aformentioned bands, but all fans of melody, harmony and of course, record making.


 

 

18 comments:

steve simels said...

Hey, I knew them when. 😎 Seriously, from what I've heard. this is pretty much their best record so far. And have I mentioned that I'm absolutely in awe of their work ethic?

Cleveland Jeff said...

Gush away. It's a terrific record, even by their standards.

Shriner said...

As somebody who didn't get them at all, but absolutely loved the last record, I have to admit the "spot the influences" on this one took me out of it on first listen so much it was distracting. I will give it another spin, though. The two songs from the single before this album (Broken Heart/Friday), though, are excellent.

Noel M said...

Great review, Sal. It's fun to read when you land on a new record you really like, because you are such a music fan that - like me - I know you really want to find new cool music to dig. And it's fun to hear a band play something that feels adjacent to - yet, as your review says, distinct from - favorites of the past.

On that note, just heard the new Robyn Hitchcock single, "I Am This Thing," and I'm totally beguiled. Check it out here, or if this link doesn't work, on the Youtubes.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tR_m50hp7Kk

Michael Giltz said...

A first listen was excellent, but I too wanted to just hear it and get that out of the way (Brian Wilson! The Raspberries!) so I know what to expect and can just let it soak in on further listens. Waiting for a minute when I can go from start to finish without interruption. But I'm sure it's a keeper and repeated plays will only improve it.

Noel M said...

p.s. "Nothin' But You" is a delicious little song. Sounds like sitting on a grassy field, legs splayed out, nothing complicated to do that day but rock out.

paulinca said...

I've been into the Lemon Twigs from their second release. They are wonderful. What I love is that EVERY song captures what's in their record collection. With that, there are no repeats, no tiring of demonstrating their ability to draw from that very deep well of glam and power pop and soft rock from the late '60s and early '70s. The Twigs keep me coming back every time!

cmealha said...

There is so much meat on the bone in this record that everyone should be well satisfied. I hear all the same references that you mentioned. Their songwriting continues to amaze. What has really been impressing me as of late is their production chops. Listening to their outside work with their dad, Tchotchke, Thundercat et al, their studio technique is amazing. People are going to like different songs for different reasons on this record. There's so much to unpack. My faves are "My Heart is In Your Hands Tonight" and "2 or 3", which has a bridge that is worth the price of admission.
I recently saw them at the Troubadour and they just killed it live. Now they've hit it out of the park in the studio as well.

Sal Nunziato said...

"Joy" just jumped up about six slots!

Anonymous said...

One of my faves as well. Anything in particular change your mind?

cmealha said...

One of my favorites as well. Anything in particular that changed your mind?

Sal Nunziato said...

I have a very methodical way of listening to records by favorite artists. Two or three basic plays. A head phone pass. And then the very focused vinyl pass with lyrics in hand like the old days. The string section on "Joy" killed me.

New ratings:
Look To Your Mind- *****
2 Or 3- ****1/2
Nothin' But You- *****
Gather Round- ***
I Just Can't Get Over Losing You- ****
Fire & Gold- *****
Mean To Me- ****1/2
Bring You Down- **1/2
Yeah I Do- ****
I Hurt You- ****
You're Still My Girl- ***1/2
Joy- ****1/2
My Heart Is In Your Hands Tonight- *****
Your True Enemy- ***1/2

Rob said...

These guys are good. My touchstone is in live performance...they sound and play great. Kudos to their sound board team as guitars, drums, vocals ring authentic

Rob said...

PS - check out "Friday (I'm gonna love you) @ the Bowery Ballroom (YouTube)- you'll be tapping your feet

Guy Incognito said...

Hey Noel - I agree on the RH song, and was sorry I had to miss his recent Athens show.

pattirules said...

It's fucking great! Sal your review is spot on!

cmealha said...

It is a beautiful arrangement.

Dr Wu said...

5-stars, for sure! I’ve taken to adding the standalone single, “I’ve Got A Broken Heart”/“Friday (I’m Gonna Love You)” while streaming the album. And I’ve been streaming this a lot since the album’s release. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

https://youtu.be/9OHuQ2-4aUM?si=zPfYwto9tCsPrBUZ

https://youtu.be/GhLl5J82eCg?si=U1O64eXpDRjQ3mOW