Johnossi - Johnossi (2006)

  • 14 Sep, 11:50
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Artist:
Title: Johnossi
Year Of Release: 2006
Label: Universal Music AB
Genre: Indie Rock, Alternative Rock
Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:46:33
Total Size: 305 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. The Show Tonight
02. Execution Song Explicit
03. Glory Days To Come
04. There's A Lot Of Things To Do Before You Die
05. Man Must Dance
06. Family Values
07. Press Hold
08. Happiness a La Mode
09. From People's Heart
10. Santa Monica Bay
11. The Lottery
12. Summerbreeze
13. Rescue Team
14. Risky Business I
15. Risky Business II

Johnossi are singer/guitarist John Engelbert and drummer Oskar "Ossi" Bonde, and for a duo, this Swedish pair packs quite a punch. You wouldn't think so from the folky, acoustic intro to "The Show Tonight," which opens their eponymous debut album, not, at least, until Engelbert's electric guitar storms in and kicks the song toward hard rock. But Johnossi delight in bashing around genres, from the bluesy ballad "The Lottery," which slams into Southern rock and boasts a "Free Bird"-styled soaring guitar solo, to the porch picking blues of "Man Must Dance," which slides surprisingly into sharply angular post-punk. "Dance" is irrepressible and "Execution Song" equally so, an insatiable slab of '60s garage. "Rescue Team" positively swaggers around British Invasion territory with a fabulously infectious singalong chorus, mod for the modern age, Engelbert's Little Richard's "oohs" adding to the fun. Less catchy but more intense is "Press Hold," a superb mix of late-'60s-styled rock with an indie inflection and a Western flair. "Santa Monica Bay" also slides between genres, a supple shift from coursing R&B into '70s-styled hard rock, while "Glory Days to Come" is equally driving, a Western with gloom-pop overtones and hard rock underpinnings. The music may shift dramatically, but the pair's themes rarely do, with most revolving around soul-searching and/or angsty situations. Some are poignant, like the wishing-for-a-happy-home "Family Values"; some are reassuring, like the self-explanatory "There's a Lot of Things to Do Before You Die"; although (uniquely) the pretty, yearning "Summerbreeze" is outright nasty. With plenty to chew over lyrically and music to knock your socks off, Johnossi prove the power of two's might.