"Tokyo" is instantly recognisable as a Penny Ikinger record; it contains no shortage of Penny Moments. They're in the up-vibe and scything guitar of lead single "Gin No Suzu", the rumble and fire of "Tsunami" and the quirky, playful vocal undercurrent in "Myth".
Penny's accomplished singing, unconventional guitar playing, folkish song structure and willingness to take risks make this a great album.
The restrained "Tokyo City" evokes a yearning for a place that's left a deep impression, building on spoken-sung words and climbing to a sonic hailstorm. "Art In Paris" is another travelogue that switches from a sunny groove to an elegiac bridge that slides into a shallow pool of funk.
"Ride On Cowboy" sits up on its haunches atop a slithering, sexy groove before delivering its hook.
"Southern Man" owes less to Neil Young than it does to Rowland S. Howard. "Gold Rush" is blues-rock with harmonica and a Spaghetti Western male chorus behind it. "Hurricane" - are these Neil Young references ironic? - is a smouldering, psychedelic brooder that could have been on Sonic Youth's "Daydream Nation".
"Get Away Car" winds up "Tokyo" on another rock note; tightly-bound Velvets guitars take off their gloves and get stuck into a bare-knuckle first-fight. Simple and very effective.
Hopefully the wait won't be long for a follow-up but it will be a long time before "Tokyo" wears out its welcome.
1/2