The fifth full-length release and the first
Darkness outing for
Cooking Vinyl,
Pinewood Smile is also the inaugural studio jaunt for new drummer
Rufus Tiger Taylor (son of
Queen's
Roger Taylor), who took over for
Emily Dolan Davies after the release of 2015's excellent
Last of Our Kind. That LP was a good distillation of what makes
the Darkness so compelling -- at their best, they're a near perfect amalgam of
Thin Lizzy,
Queen,
Led Zeppelin, and
AC/DC; both self-aware and hopelessly in love with the dumb pageantry of rock & roll. It's the album's three singles ("All the Pretty Girls," "Solid Gold," and "Southern Trains") that recapture that magic, delivering just the right balance of pomp and grit -- the ludicrous, swashbuckling send-up "Buccaneers of Hispaniola" and similarly
Monty Python-esque sister track "Japanese Prisoner of Love" might be growers. Also, the soulful, R&B-kissed "Why Don't the Beautiful Cry?" and the atypically self-conscious "I Wish I Was in Heaven," the latter of which very frankly examines the group's post-
Permission to Land struggles, prove that
Justin Hawkins is more than just an extraordinarily gifted party metal ponce. ~ James Christopher Monger