Superette
must love animals. Last year, the group named their debut EP Rosepig
after the dog that featured on the cover. The cover of their recent
single, Touch Me, was adorned by a mouse and a birthday cake. No prizes
then for guessing what to look for when you head to the record store
to buy their fantastic new album, Tiger.
Tiger was created by the same line-up that brought us Rosepig but lead
singer/guitarist Dave Mulcahy, bassist Ben Howe, and drummer Greta Anderson have stretched
Superette into a more powerful musical unit than Rosepig would ever have suggested
possible. That means the clean instrumental drive of the three-piece band is augmented by
vastly more assured arrangement and studio production from the band and engineer Nick
Roughan over a set of twelve songs that confirm their quality songwriting talent.
Killer Clown is the only EP track present on Tiger. Touch Me, also here, gives more
indication of what to expect from Tiger -- confident, strident performance and extra
throttle added to the group's vocals by Greta and Ben joining Dave at the mic throughout
the album.
Comparisons to JPS Experience, Dave's previous band, are inevitable but Superette's
smart, distinctive music sounds increasingly like its own thing: a blend of chunky riffs
and sweet melodies that makes real comparison hard. But if you blend the attitudes of a
certain Sonic Youthness in the second half of Tiger and a hint of T Rex, especially by the
slower songs, with your classic Flying Nun songwriting ingredients then you may have it.
Add the cryptic lyrical sense that has always characterised Mulcahy's writing and there's
definitely something special here.
What's certain is that there is variety aplenty. The ragged rocking of Ugly Things and
I Got It Clean are followed by Saskatchewan and Taiwan, each with a bizarre geographical
hook. The bright hooks of Touch Me and Kiss Someone contrast with upright heavy
riff-monsters like Funny Weather and Felo de se. The mood then extends to gentler moments
Bye Bye and Dave's beautiful solo album closer, Waves.
Superette's videos for Killer Clown and Touch Me have already received plenty of
attention. Killer Clown, a surreal adults-as-children party sequence starred the dog
Rosepig. Touch Me features pretty much the same cast involved in some badass peepshow
action. Another epic Superette clip is due shortly for album track Kiss Someone, and
they're promising this one is a safari video with the usual cast.
Those twisted visuals match Superette's song sensibility all too
well. There are definitely some strange depths in their music. That
just makes it all the more interesting and certainly adds to the
fun. Tiger: all sorts of strange fun and definitely worth a ride.