Let that be the time, 1979, when high school friends Steve Allen and Ron Flynt (with Chris Silagyi and Mike Gallo) released their debut album as 20/20. The band never reached me at the time, but based on Back To California it is an album to check out.
Somewhere around 2019 the two played a new song to each other as there was talk of doing a show in LA in 2020. Ron's son Ray would be on drums and that signed it. The two went to work to write new songs. As we all know, things happened along the way in 2020 and beyond, but finally the result is here. 20/20 has released an album that is filled with pop gems both warm and with enough urgency to keep any listener on its toes.
Today the two protagonists are at least in their mid-sixties, but it's not something you will hear. The music is alive and regularly sparkles. This is a band that has something to prove to the world all over again. This starts with the already mentioned single. The rhythm is driving. The music is a spiced up version of The Byrds and Roger McGuinn's great solo album 'Back From Rio'. The band spruces it up with some rock elements, as was popular in the late 70s and early 80s in the U.S. 'Back To California' is the kind of song I instantly relate to and can sing along with. Yes, I think it's the best song on the album when all is said and done, but it's also a great opener that leads the way into Back To California. 'Why Do I Hurt Myself' follows right on its heals and even adds some modern sounding 'aahhs' as background vocals to convince those who are harder to convince. Just very well done.
Promo photo |
When the band starts rocking as well in 'Springtime Love Song', I'm more than sold. A slide enters the mix, making the song just this little dirtier. It gives the album a little and welcome spice.
In the past, say from the late 80s onwards, comebacks were usually for bands that formed again after years of inactivity and often presented lacklustre affairs. In recent years dozens of comebacks, mainly from the U.S., have reached me and a lot of them are all ambitious in the musical sense but often made for the love of music and not with the idea of making it big anyway. 20/20's Back To California comes across as such an album. The love for the new music and playing it is all over the album. It is what makes me appreciate it just this little more, as this album is not just good. It's a little better than that.
Wout de Natris - van der Borght
You can listen to and order Back To California here:
https://bigstirrecords.bandcamp.com/album/back-to-california-single