She's About To Cross My Mind

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She's About To Cross My Mind album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 32:22

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Stellar Pop

lowexpectations2010

At their best ("Floating By") The Red Button are very reminiscent of Jon Brion. Always very, very Beatles-esque. Crafty tunes, great arrangements. Nothing earth shattering, just awfully good.

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First 5 tracks seem the best

CosmicBob

Good music featured on Little Steven's Underground. I liked the first half of the tracks better. Very similar to The SpongeTones "Beat and Tom".

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Beatle-esque

rumble

I picked this one up at the local record store - attracted by the stylish cover and staff recommendation. It is a very nice collection of power-pop songs with Beatles harmonies, like a Knickerbockers for the 21st century - recommended! If in doubt, start with the title song to get a feel for it.

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They Say All Music Guide

This is the most fun, unabashedly Beatles-esque power-pop platter to come out of L.A. in years. Reminding refreshingly of ‘70s/’80s Angelino forebears the Last and Three O’Clock with flecks of the Rutles’ All You Need Is Cash, She’s About to Cross My Mind has the style and flair that fans of the With the Beatles-Sgt. Pepper Fab Four dream of nightly. These tasty, upbeat tunes are also the sugar plums dancing in those beat group lovers’ nocturnal visions, outfitted with brazen McCartney basslines (“Free” is the latest in a long line to grab the one from “Taxman”), Harrison’s imitable Rickenbacker chimey guitars, and the simple harmonies of American contemporaries (fellow Brian Epstein client) the Cyrkle, Beau Brummels, and Lovin’ Spoonful. They’re 11 sunny, post-Merseybeat gems à la Brits the Zombies, Hollies, Searchers, and Elvis Costello (“Hopes Up”) — or, to stick with L.A. lore, the Byrds, Knickerbockers, Merry-Go-Round, Monkees, Nerves, Bangs/Bangles, and Jason Falkner’s many muses. Who are these happy Buttons, you ask? Two singer-songwriters with time for fruitful collaboration, Seth Swirsky (a hit tunesmith writing for Tina Turner, Al Green, Rufus Wainwright, Jane Weidlin, etc., not to mention his own 2005 LP, Instant Pleasure) — and Rex Daisy’s Mike Ruekberg (composer of indie film cult fave Dummy’s soundtrack). Clearly, neither cares a fig how nostalgic this sounds, and neither should you. Just radiate in the poptastic splendor of the standout opener “Cruel Girl” and its 10 equally crush-cute friends. – Jack Rabid

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