Long Beach, CA's
Maxeen fuses punk, new wave, and power pop with tremendous finesse on its self-titled debut. Drawing on influences like
the Pixies and
U2 while corralling its own sound, the outfit frequently conjures up visions of
the Police on amphetamines. In fact, frontman and bassist Tom Bailey delivers his lyrics with the same type of wiseass exuberance that
Sting used to craft
Outlandos d'Amour and
Reggatta de Blanc back in the day. If the songs on
Maxeen seem derivative at times, they also embody a uniqueness, thanks to drummer Jay Skowronek and guitarist Shannon McMurray's charged playing and Bailey's frazzled lyrical outlook. America's children are desensitized to violence on the explosive "Please"; an Internet girlfriend gets the boot on the marvelously executed, worldbeat-steeped "Delete Lola"; and the music biz gets the middle finger on "Strangers." Veteran producer
Ed Stasium gives the record a vibrant, punchy feel, but above all else, the members of
Maxeen -- together just a year at the time they committed these dozen rockers to tape -- thrive on their own chemistry. With nary a clunker on the disc, the result is one of 2003's most auspicious debuts. ~ John D. Luerssen