Susan SurfTone Shore (2011, Acme Brothers Records)

Hudson, New York, might not come to mind as being the hometown of one of the surf revivalโ€™s brightest guitarists. But think again, hodad: The Columbia County city begat Susan SurfTone (born Susan Yasinski), who graduated from Hudson High School (Class of 1972) and took lessons at the now-gone Osbourne Music store. Before learning her trade with 1980s new wave bands, she soaked up the Beatles, โ€™60s garage rock, and โ€™70s punk. In 1993 she consummated her love of instrumental surf music and started Rochesterโ€™s Susan and the SurfTones, which released several albums, toured Europe repeatedly, and placed tunes in MTVโ€™s โ€œReal World: Syndeyโ€ before crashing ashore in 2011.

SurfTone now makes her home a bit closer to the Pacific: in Portland, Oregon. Those expecting curl-shooting pyrotechnics ร  la Dick Dale may at first be thrown off by SurfToneโ€™s cooler, more subdued sound. But, while being perhaps more idiomatically representative, her light โ€™nโ€™ loungey style also recalls the influence jazzers like Johnny Smith and Charlie Christian had on the Venturesโ€™ Bob Bogle and Don Wilson and other early surf players. Producer Steve Kravacโ€™s (Blink 182, Less Than Jake) antiseptic approach often has the instruments sounding demo-ish, as if theyโ€™re plugged straight into the mixing board rather being played live in the room by the band. Nevertheless, cork-bobbing cuts like โ€œJadeโ€ and โ€œTrainโ€ have characteristic charm, and the eerie, atmospheric slink through the Doorsโ€™ โ€œRiders on the Stormโ€ is a must-hear.
www.susansurftone.com.

Peter Aaron is the arts editor for Chronogram.

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