On a 7-song debut EP released in 2010, Chapel Hill newcomers Wylie Hunter & the Cazadores served notice they were to be taken seriously. Frontman and songwriter Hunter, a Greensboro native, wrote from the somewhat green perspective of a kid in his early 20s, because, well, he was in his early 20s. But you believed him when he sang, such was the sheer passion and dedication in his voice.

โ€œSomeone You Used To Know,โ€ released Feb. 3 as a single to advance the bandโ€™s upcoming album of the same name, picks up where that EP left off and shows a step forward. Some bitterness has seeped through the cracks in Hunterโ€™s valiant facade; the girl got away and left him wrecked, but he vows to bounce back. โ€œIโ€™m not broken,โ€ Hunter assures, โ€œIโ€™m still chasing down my dreams.โ€ His bandmatesguitarist William Taylor, bassist Seth Barden and drummer Paul Fisherlock in behind their leader with equal parts power and precision, driving home a near-perfect four-minute salvo of old-school rock โ€˜nโ€™ roll.

The flip side, โ€œTattooโ€™d Girls,โ€ is more playful musically, from its sly piano intro to its swinging chorus hook to its title charactersโ€™ โ€œink-stained skin and their mischievous grins.โ€ If it testifies to the bandโ€™s versatility, it also reveals Hunter still has a ways to go as a lyricist; the end result feels more like novelty fare thatโ€™s not built to last like the A-side. Still, taken together, these two tracks suggest the Cazadoresโ€™ new disc may push them further toward the destiny Hunter seems fiercely determined to reach.