During the always-nostalgic '90s, any number of musicians paid homage to some combination of
the Beatles,
the Beach Boys, and
Burt Bacharach, trying to channel those influences into perfect
pop that could actually stand alongside the work of their heroes. From the gruff Fab Four cops of
Oasis to the acidic
easy listening of
the Divine Comedy to even the angelic, surf-kissed harmonies of
R.E.M.'s
Up, you could hardly open your ears without some reminder of the divine three B's. But no one, perhaps, has been able to invoke the entire trio as effectively as
the Pearlfishers'
David Scott does on
Across the Milky Way, a gorgeous album good enough not to send you immediately scurrying to your record collection for a taste of the real thing. Songs like the pastoral title track, something
Brian Wilson might have conjured up if he'd been born in Scotland instead of California, and
"New Stars," three blissful minutes of everything that's great about jangle
pop, are the real thing, in fact -- and that's just the first two cuts. With help from a string section, horns, a pair of drummers, and even a banjo player,
Scott isn't limited in his influences. A true student of
pop, he nods here to everything from the
Brill Building to sentimental '70s AM radio fare. But he always returns to those often-elusive touchstones, with impeccable results. Wouldn't
Bacharach himself want to claim the heart-tugging, fluegelhorn-flecked instrumental
"The Vampires of Camelon"? Wouldn't
Mike Love and company have loved to tackle the soaring chorus of
"Shine It Out"? And couldn't the gentle
"Paint on a Smile" pass for a
McCartney offering from a mid-period Moptops album? To some, that probably reads like sacrilege, especially given that
Scott's lyrics, while often evocative and never dumb, aren't the equal of his music. Then again, that would be a tall order indeed -- and after all, the words of
Scott's idols are usually remembered far less often than their hummable, loveable, damn near-inescapable tunes. If those are what you're looking for, then
Across the Milky Way sounds like an outing for the ages. ~ Dan LeRoy