Fully Bully

Doug Cowan’s club emphasizes the literate indie pop they’ve always done best
By SAM PFEIFLE  |  February 16, 2006

NINE IS FINE Aging well.Somewhat quietly, Doug Cowan’s band has stuck around long enough to become one of the Portland scene’s elder statesmen. Formed in 1997, they changed their name from Bully Pulpit so long ago that few probably remember they were ever anything other than the one-word collective Bullyclub. What’s that mean as they ready to release their third full-length album?

Well, says Cowan, “It’s hard to create a buzz again around ourselves.” Part of what excites any scene, he rightly notes, is what’s new. When you’ve been around for nine years, playing thoughtful, melodic indie pop the likes of which you won’t hear much on any radio station that isn’t run by a university, in a town of 60,000, with a wife and kids at home who make touring look fairly unattractive, you take what success you can get.

“Original bands,” says Cowan, “unless you have that huge buzz, you overuse your audience very quickly.” But it’s been consistent, it’s been taken seriously, and for the two albums Bullyclub have put out previously I’ve used words like “brainy” and “pretty damn cool.” “Nightmares are Good Things,” off 2003’s Tenderhooks, is still a song that I listen to often, if only for that one great notion that “Nightmares are good things that happen to you.”

Back then, Cowan was teaming with the prolific Jose Ayerve — of Spouse, a Spanish-only solo album, and the more recent Nuclear Waste Management Club. But he’s now gotten busy enough tour-managing and playing with the Pernice Brothers that’s he’s bid the Bullyclub adieu, other than guest spots on the brand-new Babbleluck’s “Heavier than Metal” and the Replacements cover, “Can’t Hardly Wait,” which for some reason I’ve never before connected with that fairly amusing Jennifer Love Hewitt movie of the same title.

But that 1990s paean to the likes of Sixteen Candles and Say Anything does share a sentiment with Replacements frontman Paul Westerberg’s “Jesus rides beside me/ Never buys any smokes” and Doug Cowan’s still urgent melancholy reflections on life’s bitter realities.

My new favorite comes in Babbleluck’s “Twice on Sunday”: “‘It’s the weekend,’ she says,/ ‘Do we have to be so old?’” That song also comes with a killer moment in the chorus refrain where Cowan bends his voice down in making “Sunday” a three-syllable word. Also here, I think the rhythm section — the very-crisp John Nunan on drums and Josh Denkmire on bass — is at its most interesting and active. For some reason, I’m reminded of Harry Nilsson’s “Coconut,” but that’s not very accurate as a musical reference.

If anything, I think I’d peg Bullyclub at some point plotted between Uncle Tupelo, Soul Asylum, and Red House Painters (which I guess would be similar to Golden Smog, the side project that features Tupelo’s Jeff Tweedy and Asylum’s Dan Murphy). This is the first impression, anyway, with “Assisted Living,” the new album’s opener and one of its strongest, with an introduction in a hurry to vocals immediate and high in the mix.

1  |  2  |   next >
  Topics: Music Features , Entertainment, Music, Pop and Rock Music,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
More Information
ARTICLES BY SAM PFEIFLE
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   IS THERE A DIFFERENCE BETWEEN WHAT YOU LIKE AND WHAT IS GOOD?  |  October 17, 2012
    Charlie Gaylord is one of Maine's proprietors of what is good.
  •   GOING DOWN A ROAD FEELING BAD WITH SAMUEL JAMES  |  October 17, 2012
    Turns out those rumors about Big Black Ben were true: Not only has he "been with white women," but he's even fathered a child by the wife of the local police chief, who's now the prison warden intent on hanging Ben high now that he has him in his clutches after all this time.
  •   JUST A BUNCH OF ROGUES, OUTLAWS & DRUNKS  |  October 10, 2012
    It takes true commitment to translate to the studio the kind of pub shout-along anthems in which the Pubcrawlers specialize.
  •   NICK ‘DANGER’ CURRAN, 35  |  October 10, 2012
    There was a little pocket of time in the late '90s and early 2000s when the Free Street Taverna was a place where the Piners and King Memphis and the Coming Grass and Diesel Doug and the Long Haul Truckers could play in the window and it all felt just a little bit like Nashville every once in a while. Better than that, actually.
  •   A CONVERSATION WITH CHRIS PANDOLFI  |  October 10, 2012
    Because its musicians play with fiddles and banjos and stand-up basses, there is an idea out there that bluegrass is as old as dirt.

 See all articles by: SAM PFEIFLE