The Wombats are the best early-'90s Brit-pop band you've never heard. At least that's the overriding vibe on their fourth studio album, 2018's
Beautiful People Will Ruin Your Life. Produced by
Mark Crew (
Bastille,
Rationale) and
Catherine Marks (
the Killers,
Wolf Alice), the album features much of what has endeared the Liverpool trio to fans; especially vocalist/guitarist Matthew Murphy's literate, tongue-in-cheek self-awareness, which remains firmly intact. "You could give an aspirin the headache of its life," he croons on the opening "Cheetah Tongue." Musically, the band is in crisp from, delving into a swirling batch of post-punk-tinged anthems, many punctuated by Murphy's wiry guitars, drummer
Dan Haggis' kinetic rhythms, and bassist
Tord Øverland-Knudsen's driving, club-ready bass grooves. On the best of these tracks,
the Wombats excel, delivering psychedelia-infused jams that are equal parts
White Album-era
Beatles and
Modern Life Is Rubbish-era
Blur. That "Dip You in Honey" sounds like
XTC doing a mash-up of
the Beatles' "Tomorrow Never Knows" and
Roxette's "The Look" feels utterly, divinely intentional. Elsewhere, "Cheetah Tongue" borrows from
U2's
Achtung Baby, much in the same way
U2 borrowed from their Madchester contemporaries back in the '90s. Similarly, tracks like "Lemon to a Knife Fight" and "Black Flamingo" have a punky, off-kilter, new wave vibe that brings
the Pixies to mind. ~ Matt Collar