
I came to the Surfing Magazines in 2017 when they put out a brilliant, grungy eponymous debut album. It took me a little time that year to realize they were actually more than half a combination of one of my favorite bands of the decade. It took a YouTube video for me to click, the light suddenly coming on as I recognized “hang on a minute, that’s David Tattersall and Franic Rozycki out of the Wave Pictures.” Well of course… Wave Pictures / Surfing Magazines… it was all there staring me in the face. No wonder the sound of this apparently new band grabbed my attention so much. They also consist of half the members of Slow Club and so are a perfect amalgamation of the two bands; I received the news that a second album would land in 2021 with excitable anticipation.
There are a multitude of reasons I love the Wave Pictures, but one significant string to their indie-rock bow is the way they can inhale the grinding, pulsating essence of the Velvet Underground at their scuzzy, rocking peak and sprinkle this gold dust over their own music. When they hit the mark with this trick, which they do too often for it to be a fluke, the resulting music is truly special. I am aware this is a big statement so; I will present you with the track ‘The Woods’ from their 2013 album ‘City Forgiveness’ as exhibit A in my presentation. If we are in agreement, then read on because with this Surfing Magazines project David and Franic along with Charles Watson and Dominic Brider allow themselves free reign to drink copiously from that Velvets stream without inhibition.
That said, they are far from a one-trick guitar distortion beast, far from it. David Tattersall’s songwriting has always kept a keen eye on the pop world, in that sense these are like a slightly old-fashioned eighties indie band, before Britpop took the format overground, producing brilliant little vignettes that reference every strain of outsider pop, the kind that would treat troubling the lower reaches of the charts as a badge of honor. Take the slow, gangster strut of the title track ‘Badgers Of Wymewold;’ there are echoes of classic garage rock in that groove, a hint of shoegaze head grinding in the aggressive guitar punctuations and even a taste of experimental Jazz in the saxophone intervals. This is a musical project where everything is on the table.
I hear the Pixies too, especially from around the time they embraced surf-rock into their sound with ‘Bossanova.’ I could bring Jonathan Richman into the equation too, just listen to the child like vim the Surfing Magazines bring to the tune ‘Pink Ice Cream.’ That said, I only like to bring direct comparisons into a review if I believe the act I am writing about take those influences, develop them, toss them up in the air and construct something new and brilliant with them and that is exactly what the Surfing Magazines do. As such they are in themselves a band that deserve appreciation for being far more than a side project to the respective bands they come from. If anything, this is where David Tattersall has captured most effectively the full range of underground rock wonder and tender, bruised balladry that bleeds into all his best work. This album is worthy of the attention of anyone with ears that work properly.
Get a vinyl pressing of this album here: https://www.discogs.com/release/22554830-The-Surfing-Magazines-Badgers-of-Wymeswold








