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Reviews of "The Very Thing That You Treasure"


  • "Beautifully crafted, laid-back pop songs as sunny as a fresh summer's day, and as melancholy as mid-fall, Spike Priggen's The Very Thing That You Treasure is a delicate, yet sophisticated acoustic pop record."

    Alex Steininger

    In Music We Trust


  • "The Very Thing That You Treasure, Priggen will tell you, has been a lifetime in the making. Quite frankly it’s been worth the wait."

    Kurt Hernon

    Bangsheet


  • If there is any justice in this teen-popping world, The Very Thing That You Treasure won't get lost on the streets. It's a sweet little treasure that deserves a home.

    Carrie Havranek

    SonicNet


  • "The Very Thing that You Treasure is, quite simply, an amazing album. From the first track, a gorgeously reverby, jangly pop ballad called "Every Broken Heart," you know you're into something good. Priggen's voice is kind of nasal and a little bit awkward, but there is a gentleness to it that is immediately charming."

    Scout

    Delusions Of Adequacy


  • "Next time I'm getting over a terrorizing, head-over-heels heartbreak, The Very Thing That You Treasure will be in the driver's seat, helping me cry myself into the nearest telephone pole. Until then, this unbelievably depressing CD will be sitting on my shelf, safe from unsuspecting ears that can't deal with its gut-wrenching power. Priggen definitely has issues with chicks, as several tunes (including "Every Broken Heart" and "She Used To Be My Baby") highlight a borderline obsessive-compulsive singer-songwriter bloodletting his emotions onto a recorded medium. Priggen has a way with words, and his exceptional lyrics weave intricate tales of desperation and loss that somehow, by the disc's end, inspire a sense of hope and yearning. Nonetheless, this potent collection of tear jerking, honky-tonk pop tunes is a marvelous expression of calculated emotional outbursts. Medical authorities should be contacted immediately, as this CD should only be allowed into your CD player with a prescription from your local psychiatrist."

    Andrew Magilow

    Splendid E-zine


  • “To be blunt about it, this is a brilliant LP, and as debuts go ranks right up there with those of Marshall Crenshaw, Big Star and The Pretenders. It’s full of indelible hooks and I just want to keep playing it again and again and again…One of the year’s best”

    Toast Magazine


  • “Turns simple phrases around gorgeous melodies and into moving pop poetry”

    Mean Magazine


  • “Gloriously melancholy. Worth every minute of the ride.”

    Power Of Pop


  • “The very definition of bittersweet”

    Joey Sweeney

    Time Out New York


  • "His lyrics seethe with John Lennon's anger (and wit), but most often, and most brilliantly, they hinge on the sort of forlorn melancholy that Chris Bell made so affecting."

    Red Tunic Troll

    Amazon Customer Review


  • "In the finicky music world, Spike Priggen may well be destined to skirt around the perimeters of success for a few more years to come, but his satisfying songs are already worthy of a wider audience. Priggen's debut, The Very Thing That You Treasure, finds the accomplished musician joining the alt.country fray as a less cocky version of Ryan Adams. Two of the better offerings, Every Broken Heart and Outtasight take to the sort of countrified twang that R.E.M. tried for on 1991's Out Of Time. .. It is welcome news that Priggen has already set to work on a follow up."

    Rip It Up Magazine


  • "Priggen's songs are so melodic and throw up so many surprises both lyrically and sonically that it is hard not to love everything on this record.All of the tracks have been a favourite at different times so it is hard to pick out a standout song. It changes from the opening 'Every Broken Heart' to everything in-between that and the last song, 'So Good To See You', a strange psychedelic ballad full of weird effects and mellotron.

    Pennyblack Music Website


  • "In truth it's hard to single out tunes for praise when all 12 tracks are consistently solid. This is a 'song' record, an album that's not about glossy production or sampled drum beats. Spike Priggen writes damn good songs, and that's what you'll find on The Very Thing That You Treasure."

    Barfly.com


  • "Not the most rock 'n' roll of names, and one most likely that most of you have never encountered before, but then 'The Very Thing That You Treasure' isn't the most rock 'n' roll of records. In fact, the debut from New York based multi-instrumentalist Priggen is a wonderfully vibrant melting pot of eclectic pop rock styles that will have power pop fans drooling.

    Classic Rock (UK)


  • "Starting with a chorus of “Every broken heart is just like the first one”, Priggen shows his perfect hand early. Matching Teenage Fanclub with Matthew Sweet, he can’t help but sound like Big Star – which is even better! Irresistibly ragged production and endlessly bittersweet guitar solos will have you singing every line, and feeling like you wrote them all yourself. Proof beyond question that the one thing you can never grow out of is a teenage crush."

    TNT Magazine (UK)


  • "It's an album of confidant versatility, and the two years it took to record are evident in the sound of the material, the care that has been given. So often these days music can seem meaningless, vocals tossed away with a cheap rhyme, but not here."

    Logged Off Website

Americana UK Review

7outoften

starsafterstarscover2Great collection of obscure covers.  A veteran of American new wave/post punk/power pop bands including Dumptruck and the Hello Strangers, this is Priggen’s second album.  A collection of covers , he states that “a lot of the artists I admire were known as great songwriters and equally as great interpreters of other peoples songs.” Cover albums can be fairly awful vanity projects (the equivalent of inviting someone over to see your very tasteful collection) or a chance to bring a particular vision to bear on influences allowing a degree of insight into an artist’s roots (Bowie’s Pin Ups?, any other takers?). Priggen falls firmly into the latter camp although there is a  degree here of having impeccable taste (but then, don’t we all?). The only songs that listeners might immediately jump on are Alex Chilton’s “Nightime” and (gulp) Alice Cooper’s “I’m Eighteen.” Otherwise Priggen’s tastes seem to be biased towards mid eighties British indies , Nikki sudden and the Jacobites, Everything But the Girl and Orange Juice with a nod to earlier years with the Zombies “How We Were Before” and a smattering of American indies. Gathering together a collection of worthy musicians including Bun E. Carlos(Cheap Trick) and (the) Mark Spencer (of Blood Oranges and Jay Farrar fame), the sounds here are redolent of vintage power pop, approaching the delights that were to be heard from Dwight Twilley and his ilk. Opener, “In the Inside” (originally by The Hot Bodies) churns along with  Priggen’s voice sounding a little like Alejandro Escovido. On “Big Store” (written by Stephen “Tin Tin” Duffy, originally by the Jacobites) the band conjure up a colossal wall of noise with the guitars riffing away until unleashed at the end. The guitarists throughout (Mark Spencer and Ivan Julian of the Voidoids and Matthew Sweet) are superb. There are some hidden tracks after the main fare, one, a musicians’ in-joke apparently, is a recording of some guy pitching to record labels execs to put on a huge show of some sort. This tape provides the album’s title as he states that Warner Brothers have on their roster “stars after stars after stars.” The humour escapes me but after this there are two other songs, the final one a rousing cover of Orange Juice’s “Felicity”.  Priggen has a healthy attitude to the internet and his website has information on several of the covers on the album. There’s also an opportunity to listen to it as a stream, so if this review whets your appetite head on over there and tell him we sent you. Link.

New Haven Advocate Review

Music_iconLink
"It may seem strange that an album of covers--by such familiars as Alice Cooper, the Ramones, the Zombies and Big Star--can seem so personal, so lived-in, so fluid and consistent in tone and outlook. But not if you know Spike Priggen, who adds nuance and wistful abandon to every band he leads or joins, from the Hello Strangers to Dumptruck. Many of the tracks are deliciously obscure (Scritti Polittis A New Soul, Tracey Thornes Plainsailing, and the Jacobites punkily dry-witted Big Store), and one of the best is locally rooted: Hot Bodies In the Inside, penned by Kerry Miller. All are couched in Spikes preternatural alt-pop cloud of knowing, and fluffed up by a spectacular group of sidemen, including Cheap Trick drummer Bun E. Carlos and Blood Oranges Mark Spencer. Now where's that promised second album of original tunes?" — Christopher Arnott

Spike Priggen Returns Home For CD-Release Party With Plenty Of Friends

 

 

Former New Havenite Spike Priggen plays a CD-release party Saturday at Cafe Nine and a fund-raiser at Rudy’s.
By Patrick Ferrucci
Register Entertainment Editor
8/26/05


A sophomore slump? A weird career move? Former New Haven resident Spike Priggen, 41, grew up in the punk-rock era, so his second solo project might take some by surprise. "I never really played covers as a kid," says the songwriter from his New York home. "It was uncool; it just didn’t follow the do-it-yourself aesthetic."

But in the late ’80s and early ’90s, Priggen began a residency at a bar, playing every Wednesday and doing a lot of cover songs, interpreting other folks’ tunes in different ways. "All of a sudden, it was fun to do covers," he says. "It was good as a songwriter to learn others’ songs, learn how they’re put together and then break them apart. It was a weird bunch of songs."

Priggen began playing music at early age, becoming a New Haven scene fixture by his early teens, taking part in a number of bands like The Excerpts and The Obvious with fellow scenesters including Miracle Legion members Mark Mulcahy and Mr. Ray Neal, multi-instrumentalist Dean Falcone, Dumptruck’s Kirk Swan and now-Los Angeles producer and composer Jon Brion. Once in New York, Priggen formed The Hello Strangers.

But even though Priggen took the stage with many bands over the years, 2001’s "The Very Thing That You Treasure" became the first release under his own name. The album scored with critics and fans of power pop, landing a tune on "Felicity" and an iPod commercial. For a sophomore record, the songwriter felt like experimenting. "I wanted to try out some production techniques," he recalls. "I didn’t want to use my songs as guinea pigs because I’m not that prolific. Not that I didn’t have enough songs, but I just didn’t want to. So I started doing covers. I want to show that’s not a big deal, that they’re just as valid, good recordings of good songs."

Thus "Stars After Stars After Stars" came into fruition. Priggen’s 11-song covers album will see a local release at Cafe Nine Saturday, where the performer and his band — special for the occasion with a few surprises — will play his versions of tunes from such artists as Alice Cooper, Big Star, Miracle Legion, The Zombies, The Hot Bodies and The Ramones, all bands whose songs he covers on "Stars."

With a roster of mostly unknown songs, "Stars" exhibits how artists can completely rework tunes, leaving them with a totally original take on something someone else wrote. Cooper’s "I’m 18" goes from a hard-rock tune to a slightly countrified, early R.E.M.-esque swirl, while Priggen easily improves The Ramones’ "Questioningly," giving it the life the legendary band just could not.

"It’s fun to totally rearrange things," Priggen says. "The guys playing on them had mostly never heard (the originals), so making them different was not difficult. I just pretended I wrote them and then arranged them like I would."

The record’s guest performers include Cheap Trick’s Bun E. Carlos, Falcone, and contributors to They Might Be Giants, Fountains of Wayne, Jay Farrar and Beat Rodeo. "Everyone who did it," says Priggen, "is a friend of mine."

The early response to "Stars" has been interesting, but, Priggen says, exactly what he expected. "People have loved it or wondered why I would make a covers record second. But almost everything has been positive.

"One said it was a weird career move. I laughed at it. It’s like, ‘What career? Who am I (really) alienating?’ I wanted to thank him for thinking I had a career."



 

Downtown Express Feature

Volume 18 • Issue 4 | JUNE 17-23, 20

Spike priggen
Saturday, June 18th
The Lakeside Lounge
162 Avenue B
between 10th and 11th Sts.

Power pop tribute album

New York-based musician sings cover songs

By David Chiu

Spike Priggen may not be a recognizable name to most casual music listeners, and that’s fine with him. “Yeah, nobody knows who I am,” deadpans the 41-year-old singer, songwriter who has been part of the alternative rock scene for over 25 years. “I’m totally obscure. Most of the music I like is really obscure so I can take some solace in that.”

Obscure also best describes the NewYork-based musician’s choice of cover songs that make up his second solo album “Stars after Stars After Stars.” It consists of tracks originally recorded by the Ramones, Big Star, Alice Cooper, and the Zombies, as well as songs by the Jacobites and Hot Bodies, two local bands from Priggen’s hometown of New Haven, Connecticut. Making the covers album started out as an excuse to experiment and test new production techniques. “I did it for fun early on to begin with,” he says. “It kind of grew into a record that I wanted to release.”

Rather than recreating the songs in their original letter-perfect form, Priggen applied his distinct power pop melodic touch to them; one might have thought the catchy songs were truly his own tunes. “I’ve been doing them for so long that I can almost forget that I didn’t write them,” he says. “I just had it in my head from the way I remember them. I didn’t want to have them be just like the originals.”

The songs transported him back to the ‘70s and early ‘80s during which his musical tastes developed. One song he felt proud of interpreting on the record is “When You Looked At Me” by singer/songwriter Jennifer Jackson. “I think we added a pretty arrangement on that one, like what Harry Nilsson did on the Badfinger song “Without You.” Priggen even goes as far to cover “A Slow Soul” by the British pop group Scritti Politti. “It’s more of a soul ballad before they used drum machines,” he says. “It’s as far away from their later [‘80s synth pop] stuff.”

Priggen employed several talented local musicians for “Stars after Stars After Stars;” the biggest highlight according to him was having Cheap Trick drummer Bun E. Carlos play on several tracks. He has been friends with Carlos for over 25 years since meeting him backstage at a Cheap Trick concert. “It was almost like having Ringo Starr and [Led Zeppelin’s] John Boham playing drums on my record,” he says proudly. “I couldn’t think of anything that comes close to that.”

Cheap Trick were one of the bands that fostered Priggen’s love for power pop as a kid in New Haven; one of his other influences were legendary cult band Big Star, whose “Nightime” is on Priggen’s record. “I loved Big Star since when I was 12 or 13,” he says. ”I’ve always been a big fan of theirs, back when it was literally me and two other guys in New Haven knew who Big Star were.”

Spike (nee Michael) Priggen had been playing music since 1978 as a member of various bands in New Haven. He was a part of the city’s underground punk and New Wave scene (whose graduates included musician/producer Jon Brion, and Mark Mulcahy and Ray Neal of the rock band Miracle Legion). Priggen later moved to New York to study photography at the School of Visual Arts; he also formed a band called Blue Period, which later evolved into the Hello Strangers during the ‘80s. He was involved with other ensembles including the Boston-based Dumptruck; he later launched an independent label #1 Records and produced various projects. “I figured out over the last couple of weeks that a band I was in, in 1980, called TV Neats is on three different power pop compilations,” he says, indicative of his long musical resume.

After years of playing and recording with other people, Priggen finally released “The Very Thing You Treasure” (2001)—his first album under his own name—to acclaimed reviews. Recording and releasing that album proved to be a challenge when Priggen was involved in a car accident that sidelined him for several months, and suffered a vocal ailment. “I couldn’t sing for like a year,” he remembers, “between recording the music and the singing—it sort of made that record take a long time to get done.

Priggen is already busy working on a new album of his own original compositions. He doesn’t plan to go out on an extensive tour, although he will play a few local shows. Right now, he hopes that people will like and enjoy “Stars after Stars After Stars.” “I like to play and sing,” Priggen says simply. “That’s about it really. It’s like a big vanity project. I’m not making these records because somebody’s paying me. I’m making them because I’m taking money out of my own pocket and doing it.”

Inaudible Cities Post

Inaudible_cities_sasas_postInaudible Cities has a cool little post about my blogs and new record.

All Music Guide Review

Allmusicreview_1Stars After Stars After Stars
Spike Priggen   
by John D. Luerssen
From The All Music Guide

Unlike most albums of covers, Spike Priggen's Stars After Stars After Stars succeeds from start to finish. Priggen -- who's done time in almost-famous bands like Dumptruck, The Liquor Giants and The Caroline Know -- knows a thing about arranging an alt-pop song, and it shows on this diverse song cycle. "In The Inside" is a scorching, superb take on the Hot Bodies' original, and The Zombies' "How We Were Before" comes off as a winsome, warm tribute. A pair of ballads (The Pontiac Brothers' twangy, spooky "Be Married Song" and Jenifer Jackson's shimmering, guitar weeper "When You Looked At Me" are done right, while Priggen's lilting, gorgeous rendition of Big Star's "Nighttime" may be the best thing going for Stars After Stars After Stars. The man even scores by resuscitating Alice Cooper's rebellious hard rock classic "I'm Eighteen", turning it into a likable countrified bastardization of the original. Well done, Spike, well done.

East Bay Express Review

East_bay_express Spike Priggen
Stars After Stars After Stars

By Eli Messinger
Published: Wednesday, April 20, 2005

New York-based Spike Priggen of Liquor Giants, Pussywillows, and Dumptruck enthralled fans with his 2001 solo debut's synthesis of Big Star's chime, the dBs' quirkiness, and Dwight Twilley's pure pop power. This follow-up of lovingly selected covers (in the tradition of Bowie's Pin-Ups and the Band's Moondog Matinee) melds the hearts and minds of the originals with his overarching melancholy, mating a collector's ear for material with a producer's imagination for re-creation. Highlights include Priggen's versions of the Pontiac Brothers' yearning "Be Married Song" and the Zombies' delicate morning-after B-side "How We Were Before." The Ramones, Tracey Thorn, and Scritti Politti's songs all find a common wistfulness in Priggen's soul- and country-inflected arrangements. Closing the disc is a mesmerizing found-sound "J&H Productions" tape, in which a would-be Cincinnati concert promoter attempts to "get with" the "label industry." Whether the "label industry" "gets with" Spike Priggen, lovers of Lennon, Chilton, Stamey, and Sweet certainly should.

South Florida's Entertainment News & Views Review

South_floridaSpike Priggen: Stars After Stars After Stars (Volare)
With an extensive two-decade pedigree that’s found him working with some of the most America’s most illustrious alt-rock ensembles (Dumptruck, Liquor Giants, the Schramms, etc.), Spike Priggen certainly knows great power pop when he hears it. So while an album of obscure covers may seem an unlikely career move a mere two sets into his solo sojourn, given his musical inclinations, it does seem to make some sense.
Granted, most people will have no idea who these artists are. The Pontiac Brothers, the Jacobites, the Hot Bodies and Scritti Politti never made much of an impact on the public radar. The Zombies, the Ramones, and Tracey Thorn of Everything but the Girl are represented, but Priggen’s song selection still manages to keep the recognition factor nearly nil. The best known track by far turns out to be a revved-up cover of Alice Cooper’s defiant adolescent anthem, “I’m Eighteen,” rendered here in a manner befitting Neil Young and Crazy Horse, i.e. all attitude and amplitude.

Nevertheless, despite the lack of instant identification, Priggen does an admirable job of reinventing this melodic material. The fact that they’re not known actually works in his favor; unhindered by previous perceptions, he makes these tunes his own, embellishing each with lavish arrangements befitting his pop pedigree. As a result, “In the Inside,” “Be Married Song,” “Big Store,” and “Only Children Sleeping” sound like radio-ready contenders circa the ‘70s, rich, robust and instantly accessible. Things take a strange turn when the album reaches its end, as a rambling dialogue by an obviously inept talent promoter takes over the proceedings. Two uncredited songs follow, but by then the listener’s so perplexed, they seem like an unlikely coda.

Nevertheless, with Stars After Stars After Stars coming on top of his outstanding debut, The Very Thing You Treasure, Priggen’s proven his point. Rock ‘n’ roll is often at its best when it comes from unexpected sources.   
By Lee Zimmerman

Evansville Courier & Press Review

CourierBy MARK WILSON, Music critic
April 1, 2005
Spike Priggen
Stars After Stars After Stars (Volare Label)

Intelligent, well-crafted pop rock is vastly underrepresented in today's music scene. There seems to be a a consensus that it has to be disguised as "punk" (of the most lightweight variety), and even then it's generally rendered in primary colors and paint-by-numbers formula.

But for those willing to dig a little deeper, there is still a wealth of great new music out there. Priggen's 2001 solo debut, "The Very Thing You Treasure," was an under-the-radar gem. It wasn't just critics who picked up on it. It slipped into the mainstream with a song on the TV show "Felicity" and another song ("Outtasight") appearing in the first-ever iPod TV commercial. Considering that mega-rockers U2 are also shilling for iPod these days, that puts Priggen in some pretty heady company.

Although it is a highly eclectic collection of mostly obscure songs by other artists, Priggen's second album, "Stars After Stars After Stars," underscores the considerable depths of his talent. Priggen makes each song his own, giving the album a remarkable coherent sound. Some of that is due to his song selection, songs which, except for a straightforward reading of Alice Cooper's "Eighteen," render themselves to his vaguely rootsy power pop interpretations. Priggen reclaims "Questioningly," the Ramones' well-written but improbable stab at country-rock and rescues from obscurity early British pop gems such as Tracy Thorn's "Plainsailing" and Scritti Politti's "A Slow Soul."

Other highlights include a beautiful, guitar-filled version of singer-songwriter Jennifer Jackson's "When You Looked at Me," a loving rendition of Alex Chilton's "Nighttime" and the melancholy "How We Were Before," originally done by the Zombies.

The other thing that makes this album work so well is its stellar caste of backing musicians. In addition to Cheap Trick drummer Bun E. Carlos on six songs, "Stars After Stars After Stars" features a virtual Who's Who of the New York City underground music scene, including legendary guitarist Ivan Julian and musicians who have played with acts such as They Might Be Giants, Fountains of Wayne, Jay Farrar, Beat Rodeo, XTC and even Ozzy Osbourne.

Don't miss the bonus tracks either, which include the hilarious underground hipster "J and H Productions" tape (Google it for background) and two excellent bonus songs that are as good as any of the songs on the proper album.

Dream Magazine Review

Dreamletterhead2Spike Priggen
Stars After Stars After Stars
(Volare)
This second album finds Spike Priggen and a bunch of friends (Ivan Julian, Bun E Carlos, etc.) covering some great underknown songs by folks like the Pontiac Brothers, the Zombies, Nikki Sudden/Dave Kusworth the Jacobites, Tracy Thorn, the Ramones, etc. If Spike is doing all of the vocals as the press kit seems to indicate; he's the best singing vocal mimic I've ever heard. His Tracy Thorn, and Joey Ramone are uncanny.
George Parsons
Dream Magazine #5

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Reviews Of "Stars After Stars After Stars"


  • "New York-based Spike Priggen of Liquor Giants, Pussywillows, and Dumptruck enthralled fans with his 2001 solo debut's synthesis of Big Star's chime, the dBs' quirkiness, and Dwight Twilley's pure pop power. This follow-up of lovingly selected covers (in the tradition of Bowie's Pin-Ups and the Band's Moondog Matinee) melds the hearts and minds of the originals with his overarching melancholy, mating a collector's ear for material with a producer's imagination for re-creation. Highlights include Priggen's versions of the Pontiac Brothers' yearning "Be Married Song" and the Zombies' delicate morning-after B-side "How We Were Before." The Ramones, Tracey Thorn, and Scritti Politti's songs all find a common wistfulness in Priggen's soul- and country-inflected arrangements. Closing the disc is a mesmerizing found-sound "J&H Productions" tape, in which a would-be Cincinnati concert promoter attempts to "get with" the "label industry." Whether the "label industry" "gets with" Spike Priggen, lovers of Lennon, Chilton, Stamey, and Sweet certainly should."

    Eli Messinger

    East Bay Express


  • "Although it is a highly eclectic collection of mostly obscure songs by other artists, Priggen's second album, "Stars After Stars After Stars," underscores the considerable depths of his talent. Priggen makes each song his own, giving the album a remarkable coherent sound. Some of that is due to his song selection, songs which, except for a straightforward reading of Alice Cooper's "Eighteen," render themselves to his vaguely rootsy power pop interpretations. Priggen reclaims "Questioningly," the Ramones' well-written but improbable stab at country-rock and rescues from obscurity early British pop gems such as Tracy Thorn's "Plainsailing" and Scritti Politti's "A Slow Soul.""

    Mark Wilson

    Evansville Courier & Press


  • "This second album finds Spike Priggen and a bunch of friends (Ivan Julian, Bun E Carlos, etc.) covering some great underknown songs by folks like the Pontiac Brothers, the Zombies, Nikki Sudden/Dave Kusworth the Jacobites, Tracy Thorn, the Ramones, etc. If Spike is doing all of the vocals as the press kit seems to indicate; he's the best singing vocal mimic I've ever heard. His Tracy Thorn, and Joey Ramone are uncanny."

    George Parsons

    Dream Magazine #5


  • "Priggen is a frequent performer on the NYC scene and at various times has been a member of Dumptruck, Hello Strangers, Liquor Giants, Schramms, and Pussywillows. His 2001 debut revealed a tremendous talent for perfect pop songs often filtered through a country sound. Therefore, the first track on his new disc comes as quite a shock with its blast of synthesizer. Thereafter, he returns to his normal style, for which a useful comparison is Freedy Johnston, whom Priggen resembles in vocal timbre, melodically (especially), and to a lesser extent in overall style. It's a sound that doesn't work well unless lavished on high-quality songs, and Priggen supplies plenty."

    Steve

    The Big Takeover


  • "Most of the album is a nostalgic look back at the artist's past, including the bands he's played in as well as those he's idolized, including the Hot Bodies, the Jacobites, and the Zombies. He works through these songs competently and respectfully, and in the end what he's created is a tribute to his own musical development. But in doing so he's also given us a window back into some forgotten moments in music from the 70's and 80's various indie, new-wave, and punk scenes."

    George Ford

    Delusions Of Adequacy


  • "On Spike's new "Stars After Stars After Stars" he pulls off the neat trick of recording a classy set of covers (The Pontiac Bros. "Be Married Song"; Zombies, Jenifer Jackson, Sudden & Kusworth) with a star-studded cast (Bun E Carlos, Ivan Julian). He's kicked around in some bands that almost crossed over (Dumptruck, The Liquor Giants, The Caroline Know)--can he finally get a break?". -

    Josh Goldfein

    The Village Voice

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