Most of the bands taking part in the big post-punk revival of the mid-2000s come at the music from the indie-guitar side of things, even groups like
Franz Ferdinand, whose inspirations were as likely to be wielding synths as Stratocasters. The debut album by London-based duo
Grand National takes exactly the opposite tack: although the uniformly sweet pop songs on
Kicking the National Habit sound influenced by the likes of
the Police (Rupert Lyddon and Lawrence Rudd claim that they first worked together in a
Sting tribute band),
Men at Work,
Duran Duran, and the rest of the more commercial side of the early MTV era, the arrangements are more electronic in nature. Songs like "Peanut Dreams," with its prominent, looping bass riff and hypnotic synth lines, echo the dancefloor experiments of
New Order and the rest of the Factory Records stable circa 1985, but the catchy melodies and sweetly intoned choirboy harmonies sound more like
Wham! or
Go West.
Grand National manages to balance what might seem like two very different musical styles, combining them in new and interesting ways on songs like "Talk Amongst Yourselves" and "Drink to Moving On." ~ Stewart Mason