Going out under his own name after his old band jumped ship midway through recording, the cape-wearying, keyboard playing Stevie's mixing it with an expanded mix of a stellar local players and sounding remarkably fresh.
Stevie's yowling vocal and keyboards rightly occupy centre-stage in Brian Mann's mighty production. The chunky bottom end gives a solid foundation, especially on the rumbling male-female blues duet "I Don't Want You No More" where roaring harmonica punches through the middle.
(The female backing vocals are a feature of "Mamma Didn't Want Any Fruit" and the album credits aren't clear, but presumably Brodie-Ann Wright from Brisbane band Felinedown is one of them.)
Stevie plants his flag as a committed old-time rocker (a familiar theme) on "Dynosaur" and "Playing Rock 'n' Roll", while "Parking Lot" references the "Exile" Stones in the guitar department while telling a story about parents abandoning their offspring. As a great man once said: You gotta write about something.
"Funny Feeling" is a good song in search of an ending. Spoiler: It doesn't find one. "Clean" is heart-felt pop, simple and effective.
"You Can Run" switches the mood to tripped-out lounge rock in a way that'd do Dave Graney proud. Obviously committed to tape live, there's a call-and-response "hey", with soulful chick vocals wrapping themselves around wandering keyboards. The song shudders to a stop before being resurrected to feature a guitar part worth bottling. It all falls apart again. Oddly, it all makes perfect sense.