Friday, 5 June 2026

It's All Good, Sugar. The Greenberry Woods

It's All Good, Sugar is an album containing pure pop with elements from all the decades in which, when all is said and done, the best music was made, because it was invented in these years. Come 2026 there are on average far more accomplished musicians and of course recording options are so much better now than in the 1960s and 70s, that musicians could not even dream of them. The Greenberry Woods is obviously making the most of these options and present a poprock album that can go with the best of them from the 2020s.

All in search of pure pop do not have to look any further. It's All Good, Sugar is filled with it, twelve songs long. In fact, it's incredible that The Greenberry Woods are able to come up winning, song after song after song.

The first time I heard an album like this, as in tapping into the 60s pop era with fully original songs of very high quality, was with the album 'Catch All' by a band filled with musical friends from different bands called Swag from 2001. Since circa ten years a host of albums have reached me attempting the same feat. I like many of them, but it seems with It's All Good, Sugar The Greenberry Woods have raised the bar some more.

Promo photo
As I had never heard of the band before, I decided to read in. The Greenberry Woods released two albums in the 1990s before calling it a day, 'Rapple Dapple' (1994) and 'Big Money Item' (1995). Like many of its contemporaries the three songwriters of the band, Brandt Huseman, Ira Katz and Matt Huseman are giving it a new try some 30 odd years later. I am not totally surprised by the 1990s link. The song 'Very Good Year' reminds me of the sound of the one album band The Caulfields alled 'Whirligig'. It also means that the band members most likely are well into their fifties, reliving a passion they once had. Based on what I'm hearing, that was very wise decision. The three are joined by multi-instrumentalist Paul Krysiak (also in Splitsville with the Huseman twins) and drummer Joe Parsons.

Another band I could mention from the 1990s, is The Posies. Like it The Greenberry Woods manages to combine The Beatles and Big Star with that tougher sound of the 1990s poprock. All the elements blend in a way that keeps tingling my ears for the whole of the album. Take 'The One That Makes You Happy'. The strong and loud guitar chord progression manages to blend perfect pop vocal melodies and harmonies. The third is Scotland's Teenage Fanclub, originally also with three songwriters and singers, as The Greenberry Woods also excel in softer, dreamier songs.

What more can I write? Hearing is believing, so let me leave you with pointing you to the link below to be convinced by the perfection on offer on It's All Good, Sugar.

Wout de Natris - van der Borght

 

You can listen to and order It's All Good, Sugar here:

https://bigstirrecords.bandcamp.com/album/its-all-good-sugar 

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