Montreal's Doughboys, like so many bands who tipped their toes in the power-pop sound, were mostly ignored by US listeners. Unless led by a ballad like the Goo Goo Dolls or pushing a punkier sound, artists with layered harmonies and a keen sense of melodic hooks were often overlooked for pure pop. On their 1993 album Crush, the band never compromise on the guitars, combining hardrock riffs with catchy leads and an occasional ripping solo. Only when the band slows down and gets dirgy does the momentum falter on an overall underappreciated gem.
Songs In This Episode:
Intro - Tearin' Away
18:00 - Fix Me
27:03 - Everything
30:25 - Neighborhood Villain
Outro - Shine
Support the podcast, join the DMO UNION at Patreon.
#249: Interview with Morgan Taylor of Mink
#248: Female Artists of the 90s
#247: Interview with J. Robbins of Jawbox and Burning Airlines
#246: Interview with author/musician Jon Fine
#245: Dyslexicon by Dandelion
#244: Powertrippin’ by The Almighty
#243: Shoegaze Round Table Discussion
#242: Tatoonie by Blind Mr. Jones
#241: Interview with Dale Crover of the Melvins
#240: Round Table Discussion on Punk in the 90s
#239: The Heart Is A Monster by Failure with Kellii Scott
#238: Apple by Mother Love Bone
#237: The Real Ramona by Throwing Muses
#236: Round Table Discussion - Most Influential 90s Bands & Artists
#235: Interview with Chris Wyse of Owl, Ace Frehley and More
#234: 001 by Dovetail Joint
#233: Acetone by Acetone
#232: Deserter’s Songs by Mercury Rev
#231: Death to Traitors by Paw with Mark Hennessy
#230: Round Table Discussion on Concerts of the 90s
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Superfancast
Bandsplain
R&B Money
Because the Boss Belongs to Us
One Song