The
Wave Pictures'
Instant Coffee Baby bears an immediate and striking resemblance to the early
Violent Femmes, from the scrappy, stripped down arrangements to Dave Tattersall's vocals of uncertain pitch and lyrics that occasionally skirt into levels of TMI that verge on uncomfortable. (The title track, in which Tattersall steals his ex's coffeemaker, includes a line in which he casually asks if her new boyfriend has given her cystitis.) Cranky late-era Brit-poppers
Hefner, whose leader
Darren Hayman uses the
Wave Pictures as his backing band at his solo gigs and arranged the horn section on "I Love You Like a Madman," is another point of comparison, as is Scandinavian oddball
Jens Lekman, whose quirky, conversational style of storytelling Tattersall recalls on loopy tracks like "Friday Night in Loughborough" and the ukulele-powered "I Remembered." There are moments of melancholy, including the unexpectedly sad country-tinged ballad "Red Wine Teeth" and "January and December," a wistful duet with Paris-based anti-folk singer
Lisa Li-Lund, but the overall mood is wryly sardonic. The
Wave Pictures are perhaps not quite good enough to shake off the ghosts of their obvious influences, but
Instant Coffee Baby is a quirky and quite often appealing listen. ~ Stewart Mason