10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Super solid debut, March 27, 2007
This review is from: Puzzle (Audio CD)
Puzzle is the debut album from Dada, one of the best and most underrated bands to come out of the 90's. It's too bad that most people wrote Dada off after "Dizz Knee Land" saturated most radio stations to the point that it drove listeners to despise the band. If you only know Dada from "Dizz Knee Land", you are really missing out on one of the best bands to come from a decade of not-so-great music (with a few exceptions, of course...) Dada was the first concert I saw right after American Highway Flower was released. My friend and I were already huge fans, and seeing them at a local Junior College was a great first concert experience. There weren't many people there, so it made for an intimate concert, and we even got to meet the guys afterwards, which was excellent. OK, so I had been made a permanent Dada fan afer that point.
Mike Gurley is a phenomenal guitarist who has only improved drastically with every release. I could watch him play for hours and hours and still be amazed at the sounds he can produce with a guitar. The man knows how to rock, plain and simple, though it never shows as well in the studio. I would strongly recommend seeing Dada live for the full effect on Mike Gurley's awesomeness. The way Gurley and Joie Calio mesh with the vocal harmonies is really something to hear. Calio's bass work is tight, and he's a great singer also when he takes the reigns on vocals. Dada is one of the only TRUE rock bands to come out of the 90's.
The tracks on Puzzle:
1) Dorina-great lead off track, starts out mellow with some excellent solo work. 5/5
2) Mary Sunshine Rain-more of a straight up rock song with some nice acoustic guitar and pretty harmonies. 4/5
3) Dog-Another rock song, which I consider one of the weaker tracks. Has a good verse melody and kind of a 60's vibe. 3/5
4) Dizz Knee Land-We all know this one. I still love this song, it was the first song I heard by Dada. 4/5
5) Surround-A quieter but quick paced acoustic rock song with more of that 60's feel. Very pleasant. 4/5
6) Here Today, Gone Tomorrow- Good stoner rock. The spoken verse works well for me. Heavy on the flanger. 4/5
7) Posters-The Dada drum solo song. A fast paced rocker that Dada does so, so well. Awesome! 5/5
8) Timothy- A ballad complete with strings and some interesting lyrics. One of my favorites. 5/5
9) Dim- I believe this song was fleetingly popular also. Quick straight up rock song with a typical 90's sound. 5/5
10) Who You Are- A solid Joie Calio/Mike Gurley song with some awesome guitar licks and rockin' bass. 4/5
11) Puzzle- The title track; a slow spacy trip with swirling guitars. Kind of a 70's lo-fi sound and a great sing along chorus. 4/5
12) Moon- My favorite song on Puzzle. The Joie Calio ballad which builds to the end and finishes with a nice guitar solo. 5/5
Overall, I give it a 4/5. Very solid and competent debut album, nowhere nearly as good as El Subliminoso, but worth checking out. Definately see Dada live if you get the chance, it will be well worth it!
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
California '90s power pop, October 20, 2004
What a fun album this one is. The production is squeaky clean and bright, the playing unerringly melodic, the guitar solos truly brilliant yet concise, and most songs well within the pop range of 3-5 minutes. The lyrics themselves help set this band apart from the rest. They're not content to just warble shiny happy tunes or wax miserable and frustrated. Instead, the lyrics are razor sharp wit. References to psychics on La Brea, Lolita, and Jim Morrison reveal this band's bent toward decadence -- and that's only on the record's arguably best track, "Posters." The song is basically an update of "Norwegian Wood," but much saucier and more visceral, with tight, TIGHT drumming and great guitar solos. More decadence is found on "Here Today, Gone Tomorrow," a great tale of a Catholic school boy turned wild hipster -- again, references to Hugh Hefner and (obliquely) William Burroughs. You get the distinct notion that the future members of Smashmouth were listening -- very closely.
What else to say about the rest? Pop hooks galore. Listen to the way the second verse leads into the chorus on "Dog," or the stunning electroacoustic strumming on "Mary Sunshine Rain." Or the excellent dynamics on the gorgeous "Dorina."
Perhaps there might be a few quibbles. The slower, more thoughtful songs drag a bit, though the final, elegiac "Moon," which bemoans a a friend's suicide, truly hits home. And if you're not one for cleverness, beware -- these guys border on being too clever for their own good.
And, yeah, these guys did hit the charts. If you were anywhere near a radio in 1992, you'll recognize "Dizz Knee Land" immediately. Not far afterward came the wilder "Dim." Altogether, a wonderful pop near-masterpiece.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Truly Original & My Favorite of All Time, December 30, 2003
This review is from: Puzzle (Audio CD)
Puzzle has remained one of my all-time favorite discs since I bought it the year it was released. There are many reasons. First, it's rare that you find an album in which you love every song on it. This is one of them that I can say this about. Mary Sunshine Rain is to this day still my favorite song (John Mayer's 'Why Georgia' is coming up the rankings quickly) with every other song on this album pushing a close second to the next. I still get goosebumps every time I listen to Mary.
The second reason is because the stylings of Dada are like nothing else you have heard before. They push the envelope of rhythm and melody without sounding weird, and it really works.
Another attribute of true Dada style are the guitar licks. The chops laid down on these tracks are as important to these songs as the lyrics. It's as if the guitar melodies are talking to you. It's amazing. Get excited about buying this CD. It is not over-produced like today's pop and rap. It is down to earth and real, yet put together like a puzzle with all the pieces perfectly fitting together. What was the last album that you purchased that you didn't FF past a song you don't really care for?
Finally, this album is timeless. I can pick it up today and get the same feeling from the songs that I did when I first fell in love with it. Honestly, I think another label should pick up the rights to this disc and re-release it and promote it like the original releases should have been.
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