14 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 29, 2003 EXPLODING HEARTS, GUITAR and if you give the Exploding Hearts ROMANTIC DIRTNAP RECORDS just thirty minutes of your time, they're Be prepared to turn your volume guaranteed to make you a believer in all knobs up - the Exploding Hearts' that is great about rock and roll: the debut has finally hit shelves. Because in rawness of the guitars, the hardly all honesty, "misdemeanor" volume lev- melodic, that rarely sweet vocal deliv- els are necessary to understand the ery, and even the Sex Pistols' wardrobe reckless fury with which the Hearts will to boot. And while one may be driven to attack. Writing some of the most addict- drop them off as a second-rate knock- ing hooks since the New Pornogra- off of the aforementioned punk greats, phers, songs like "I'm a Pretender," and you'd be doing yourself a disservice not the album's peak, "Sleeping Aides and to acknowledge that these guys are at Razor Blades," solidify the Hearts as least doing it now and they're doing bet- the modern day incarnation of the Buz- ter than anyone else. **** zcocks. This album charges through, - Alex Wolsky ARTS Mom is always right, Ssay SF's Stratford 4 By Joel M. Hoard Daily Arts Editor MUsic REVI EW When Peter Hayes and Robert Turner left Chris Streng behind to form Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, they probably never would have thought that Streng would move on to a band that's better than B.R.M.C. Well, they would have been wrong. Streng carried on with the Stratford 4, a San Francisco-based band that features the same Jesus & Mary Chain-style guitar shimmer and feedback effects as the B.R.M.C. but without B.R.M.C.'s hipster goth- punk posing. Sure, the Stratford 4 have a pretty hip image going for 'em, and their music appeals mostly to the deck indie kids, but at the same time, they're not afraid to let their guard down and show their earnest side. Take for example "Telephone," the centerpiece of the band's latest, Love & Distortion, during which Streng relates a phone conversation with his mother. Over thick layers of guitar and white noise, he complains of THE STRATFORD 4 lonely nights spent with just his radio to keep him company, and his mother comforts him by saying "Son, you're gonna be just fine / But don't forget Bob Dylan / Don't for- get the Stones / And don't spend Sat- urday night all alone / When I was 22 I was a lot like you." Touching enough to melt even the hardest heart. Lush guitars and thoughtful lyrics permeate throughout all of Love & Distortion, making for one of rock's realest and best records in recent memory. 1 { 4 4