Nuclear Honey
with Valley Young and Pisces Rising
Deep South the Bar
Thursday, Aug. 15
8:30 p.m., $6

Dead-inspired guitar noodles? Check. Syncopated rhythms and greasy breaks? Check. Weighty meditations on life and love? Check. Reprises that recur with the frequency of Geico commercials? Check, check and check.
The second EP by Raleigh septet Nuclear Honey, Nobody Panic meanders through a series of Southern rock-and-roots jam moves so familiar that theyโre either classic or hackneyed, depending on the vantage. Being a little generic isnโt the worst thing in the world. If youโre looking for bleach, who cares if itโs Clorox or Val-U-Time? In the right hands these timeworn staples can kill, but these just arenโt those hands. The seven-song EP follows last yearโs acoustic debut, Tombstone Sessions EP; it is performed with some skill and melody, so far as it goes. But Nuclear Honey fails to supply anything unique or vibrant to the formulas they espouse.
Nobody Panic opens with โLong Time Comin,โ a song whose lilting folk-rock recalls Counting Crows, complete with bouncy verse and wailing chorus. The guitar lead to โYou Want It Allโ is pure Allmans, while the confessional heartbreak ode โOn Our Ownโ counters with the frat-boy sophistication of John Mayer. During โElephant,โ a reggae-fired jam, the elephant in the room is frontman Gray Henderson, who sings โI named him after myself.โ It is too cute by half.
If youโre unfamiliar with Southern rock, the jams that flowed from it and the rock bands that have taken its ebullience as their own, Nuclear Honeyโs mimesis might be effective enough. But the turnip truck only passes this way a couple times a day, while the rest of us can be content to hum โMr. Jones,โ should the abiding need ever present itself.
Label: self-released
This article appeared in print with the headline โOverdue payoffs, new promises.โ


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