FYI, I also noticed at this show how many of their songs start out, in the first couple of bars, sounding like Simon & Garfunkel songs. Maybe it's because I saw S&G at MCI, but it was pretty uncanny sometimes (but just for a sec...).
Washington Post, Feb 24
Fountains of Wayne
Giving voice to office park peons and wanderlusting travel agents, the suburban explorers of Fountains of Wayne charmed a sold-out 9:30 club Sunday with their power-pop tales about hope and helplessness out where the Wal-Marts grow.
Led by frontman Chris Collingwood and bassist Adam Schlesinger, the New Jersey quartet (plus a keyboardist for the show) packed 19 songs into a 75-minute set, and each blissfully hooked-out number, shimmering with Beach Boys harmonies and arena-sweet guitar breaks, sounded like a hit. FOW might rib the little man as well as root for him -- see the rockin', razzin' "Bright Future in Sales" -- but they always give even the lowliest temp reason to smile.
Dipping generously into its three deliriously catchy albums -- including newest prize "Welcome Interstate Managers" -- the band sha-la-la'd through such jangly crowd faves as "I've Got a Flair," "Red Dragon Tattoo" and "No Better Place." The Simon and Garfunkelesque "Hey Julie" turned into a clock-puncher's singalong: "Working all day for a mean little man / With a clip-on tie and a rub-on tan."
MTV staple and Grammy nominee "Stacy's Mom" was given swaggery edge by oft-mugging guitarist Jody Porter. And lest anyone think these guys don't know of what they speak, they extended a take of "Radiation Vibe" with snippets of Foreigner's "Double Vision," Kansas's "Carry on Wayward Son," Steve Miller Band's "Jet Airliner," and ZZ Top's "Sharp Dressed Man" -- admitting that they, too, have spent a lot of time aimlessly cruising from one 7-Eleven to the next and drowning out the monotony with vitally uncool classic rock.
-- Sean Daly