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If Throw Me the Statue's first record, Moonbeams, skirted around frontman Scott Reitherman's potential as a pop songwriter, then the band's sophomore effort, Creaturesque, is the realization of all the promise that shone through Moonbeams' best tracks. But where Moonbeams was inconsistent and rough around the edges, Creaturesque is much more polished, a bright, buoyant opus of similarly hooky, uptempo songs. While TMTS' success still hangs on its guitar hooks and propulsive song structure, it's the synthesizer, the brass, and the little accents like white noise or an occasional xylophone ping that stand out this time. The only thing that hasn't changed at all since the last record is Reitherman's disjointed, occasionally indecipherable prose, which he croons in a high-pitched tenor that can sound either soft and ethereal or thin and reedy. Though Creaturesque's success rides chiefly on melody, tunes can't save a pop song from unappealing verbal cliché. But Reitherman crafts his lyrics as deliberately as his instrumentals. Creaturesque simmers with sexual tension, a well-traversed theme Reitherman addresses in riddle and metaphor. In "Pistols," he sings "You little boys fall on your pistols/Annie, does your boyfriend know?/You seek a habit and a small feeling of danger/Slow glide down through the canyon/Tearing the layers off with abandon." "Pistol" and "canyon" are obvious euphemisms, but the song's three-word refrain cinches it: "Pull me in." At its core, Creaturesque is ab
Waving At The Shore
Throw Me The Statue
Pistols
Throw Me The Statue
Tag
Throw Me The Statue
Ancestors
Throw Me The Statue
Noises
Throw Me The Statue
Snowshoes
Throw Me The Statue
Dizzy From The Fall
Throw Me The Statue
Cannibal Rays
Throw Me The Statue
Hi-Fi Goon
Throw Me The Statue
Baby, You're Bored
Throw Me The Statue
Shade For A Shadow
Throw Me The Statue
The Outer Folds
Throw Me The Statue