This five-song EP finds
the Apples in Stereo in fine compositional form and typically at ease with their style of chameleonlike pop music. Sure, the
Beach Boys/
Beatles references are undeniable on Look Away + Four, but that's missing the point. Chances are, if it's pop of any form, it's made its way into
the Apples' music. Sometimes influences are allowed to intermingle. Other times, disparate production sensibilities run back to back. On "Behind the Waterfall" for instance,
the Apples give Fab Four stylings a new twist, as the band plays psychedelic carnival music from underwater (hence the title). Singer Robert Schneider carries on as if it's business as usual. He remains unfazed when the band breaks out with impromptu chunks of distortion-fueled power chords from an entirely different song. The boisterous title track is more straightforward. A melody driven by tightly packed, nasally
Beach Boys-style harmonies is punctuated with '70s soft rock horns. Similar is the infectious fuzzy jangle of the slacker ode "Everybody Let Up." Dedicated to the act of lying around, it opens with the lines, "I get such an easy feelin'/When I'm staring at the ceiling/From the morning to the evening/That's the life for me." Drummer Hilary Sidney even steps up to the mike and delivers a touching, whispery vocal on the light, bossa nova-ish ballad "Her Pretty Face." Look Away is as good an introduction as any to the overflowing pop vibrations of
the Apples in Stereo. ~ Nathan Bush