Rat A Tat Tat

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 38:21

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Laura Leebove

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Laura Leebove is a Brooklyn-based music journalist whose writing has appeared in various publications including Billboard, Spinner.com, Venus Zine, Critical Mob...more »

03.09.10
Jason Collett, Rat A Tat Tat
2010 | Label: Arts & Crafts / IODA

Rat a Tat Tat, the latest solo LP from Broken Social Scenester Jason Collett, is a collection of breezy rock songs that alternate between melancholic and acoustic-leaning ("Rave On Sad Songs," "Cold Blue Halo"), and plugged-in and bluesy ("High Summer," "Lake Superior"). "Love Is A Dirty Word" is founded on a hooky bass line, "Winnipeg Winds" is a accented with what sounds like chimes or bells, and "Bitch City" (which is nowhere near as vulgar as the title might imply) has echoed choruses of the record's title. And just like his live "Basement Revue" series, Collett invited a handful of guest musicians — this time including Liam O'Neil of the Stills, Tony Scher and BSS's Andrew Whiteman — along for the ride.

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Cool, mellow, clever lyrics

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http://radio3.cbc.ca/#/bands/Jason-Collett to listen to more

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They Say All Media Guide

Jason Collett rarely tires of exploring the limits of his 1970s songwriter fascination, and Rat A Tat Tat finds him evoking the rootsy, sun-dappled sounds of George Harrison, Bob Dylan, and Kris Kristofferson. By now a major player in Toronto’s indie scene, he ambles through these 11 tracks with help from a number of local musicians, including Robbie Lackritz (Feist’s former sound engineer) and longtime partners Carlin Nicholson and Michael O’Brien — who, after recording 2008’s Here’s to Being Here, began pursuing their own interests by launching the pop band Zeus. Rat A Tat Tat has its share of poppy moments, too, but Collett is more concerned with appropriating the sounds of yesteryear’s rock staples, from the classic rock slide guitars that fill “Lake Superior” to the elegiac “Long May You Love,” which could’ve been lifted from Harrison’s All Things Must Pass. There’s also an eccentricity to the album, whose quirks and lighthearted appeal make it a logical sequel to Here’s to Being Here. Few songs from either record match the bombast of his work with Broken Social Scene, perhaps, but Collett’s albums are better viewed as part of a whole, and Rat A Tat Tat strengthens the country-fried side of his solo personality. – Andrew Leahey

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