A title like
International Pop Overthrow suggests a far more revolutionary and ambitious approach than what
Material Issue actually served up on its first album --
Jim Ellison doesn't sound like he wants to take over the world so much as he wants (a) a girl to like him, and (b) three-minute pop songs to regain their rightful place on the radio (which, come to think of it, was a fairly revolutionary notion in 1991). Singer/songwriter and guitarist
Ellison and partners
Ted Ansani on bass and Mike Zelenko on drums sound like power pop classicists, worshiping at the altar of
Big Star,
the Raspberries, and
the Scruffs, though
Ellison's melodies are leaner and more direct than those of his obvious inspirations, and his willingness to turn up the tempos and let the guitars distort serves as a reminder that punk influenced good pop as much as pop influenced good punk. ("Trouble" and the title cut also confirm that
Ellison occasionally thought about subjects other than girls.) The production by
Jeff Murphy (whose band
Shoes was doubtless another key influence on
MI's sound) is clean and uncluttered, but maybe a bit too much so -- while nothing gets in the band's way, the group rarely displays as much power as it deserves, and the boomy sound could stand to be balanced with a bit more top-end crunch (especially on the hard-driving title track, which does feature the album's best line -- "I don't need a girlfriend, I need an accomplice"). But anyone who was looking for the future of power pop in 1991 might well have imagined these guys were it, and not without reason --
International Pop Overthrow is smart, hooky, and not afraid to sound edgy or let the amps go into the red. [A 20th Century Anniversary Edition added eight bonus tracks.] ~ Mark Deming