Clem Snide | Music | Phoenix | Phoenix New Times | The Leading Independent News Source in Phoenix, Arizona
Navigation

Clem Snide

On their fourth album, Clem Snide show they have a Soft Spot for the other side of summer, the mellow melancholy that creeps up on you at the end of a lazy backyard barbecue or the ash-end of a bonfire at the beach. It's a narrow window of time when...
Share this:
On their fourth album, Clem Snide show they have a Soft Spot for the other side of summer, the mellow melancholy that creeps up on you at the end of a lazy backyard barbecue or the ash-end of a bonfire at the beach. It's a narrow window of time when you're already nostalgic for what just happened, a walking, talking version of a Now That's What I Call Music! compilation. "Let's not swim to shore/Just float forevermore," Eef Barzelay begs on the album-opening "Forever, Now and Then," one of Soft Spot's many don't-wake-the-baby ballads built around Barzelay's soft-spoken vocals, soft-strummed guitar and Jason Glasser's eclectic landscaping. (Glasser's arsenal includes: sea horns, Hackensack organ, sine chime, a Fisher-Price TV bell, glockenspiel, gothotron, parade drum, guitarron, suede zither and more.)

Though the disc came out June 17, it still longs for the season instead of celebrating it: "Summer will come with Al Green and sweetened iced tea/Summer will come and be all green with the sweetness of thee," Barzelay sings later on "All Green." But it's not necessarily summer that Barzelay and the band pine for; it's the memory of a time when summer vacation actually meant something. They're growing older and more obligated, leaving their youth behind but still peeking at it in the rearview mirror, still looking for a little "Action" (and finding it in a song full of what our Seinfeld-rerun-addled brain would call "unbridled enthusiasm"). The new sense of responsibility actually leads to the album's most affecting moment, "Happy Birthday," a love letter to Barzelay's young son that leads straight from his heart to Stax/Volt's soul. Its clear Barzelay will be a good dad: "And I hope that your friends are true and funny/And your girlfriends are sweet and wear tight pants." Indeed.

KEEP NEW TIMES FREE... Since we started New Times, it has been defined as the free, independent voice of Phoenix, and we'd like to keep it that way. Your membership allows us to continue offering readers access to our incisive coverage of local news, food, and culture with no paywalls. You can support us by joining as a member for as little as $1.