Thomas Lunch: Diagrams Without Instructions

Thomas Lunch - Diagrams Without Instructions Ugh. Okay, let’s get some things out of the way, shall we? At his best, Thomas Lunch sounds like Thomas Dolby doing backing tracks for T. Rex.

He knows his way around a hook, and Diagrams Without Instructions (Hi-Fi Alliance) has one masterpiece – “Very Elbow” – which has the Big Music vibe of U2, Echo and the Bunnymen, and the Verve. But Lunch and co-conspirators fail to mine their raucous, experimental, and ultimately uninteresting sound for more than a few radio-ready would-be singles.

“Tator Tots & Robots” sounds enough like the aforementioned Dolby to make you miss the clever lyricism Dolby would have brought. “Oh My” is a fun thought exercise (what if Kurt Cobain had taken cues from Robert Fripp?), but overstays its welcome by a full minute. Lunch channels Cobain again in “Centipede Centerpiece,” which is a fine song arriving too late (on the CD and in the pop music timeline).

There are a couple of dandy instrumentals, and even the worst songs show glimmers of talent. As it is, though, recognizing that talent is like knowing the chef used sashimi-grade yellowfin to make an under-seasoned tuna noodle casserole.

– Lyam White
Thomas Lunch (Hi-Fi Alliance)