There as a time when an
alternative pop/rock release like
Wonderful Nothing would not have been described as commercial, radio-friendly, and mainstream. But that was before the early '90s, before the rise of
grunge icons
Pearl Jam and
Nirvana, and before
post-grunge bands like
Matchbox Twenty,
Third Eye Blind,
Creed, and
Eagle-Eye Cherry (just to give a few examples) became the sound of
rock radio. By 2002 standards,
Familiar 48's
Wonderful Nothing isn't groundbreaking; anyone who listened to
rock radio extensively in the late '90s or early 2000s has heard a lot of similar material by similar bands. But while this
Don Gehman-produced CD won't receive any awards for innovation, it still wins the listener over with sincerity, warmth, and solid songwriting. The Philadelphia band formerly known as
Bonehead has a definite asset in lead vocalist/songwriter
Jayy Mannon, whose vocal mannerisms bring to mind
Pearl Jam's
Eddie Vedder and
Matchbox Twenty's
Rob Thomas (among others).
Mannon is an expressive and emotive belter who fares well on tuneful, melodic,
pop-minded offerings like
"Place of You," "Learn to Love Again," and
"Miss You" (not to be confused with the
Rolling Stones' 1978 hit). His songs are, by early-2000s standards, quite radio-friendly -- if
Led Zeppelin,
Bad Company,
Deep Purple, and
Peter Frampton were the sound of
rock radio in the '70s, bands like
Familiar 48 are the sound of
alternative rock radio in a
post-grunge, post-
Nirvana era. And that isn't necessarily good or bad -- commercial radio (
rock,
urban,
country, or otherwise) takes a lot of well-deserved criticism for playing it safe, but that doesn't mean that everything it plays is without merit. No one will accuse
Wonderful Nothing of trying to reinvent the
alternative pop/rock and
post-grunge wheel; regardless, there is a lot to enjoy about this solid, if derivative, outing. ~ Alex Henderson