Gaz Coombes: Turn the Car Around review – genial English rocker’s best album in 20 years

(Hot Fruit/Virgin)
The former Supergrass frontman’s gorgeous, heartfelt new songs are intoxicating

It’s 30 years since Gaz Coombes formed Supergrass, the teen rock band who sold millions of their debut album, 1995’s I Should Coco, and still draw big audiences for their reunion tours. So the genial Englishman has spent some two-thirds of his life being a rock star, and this fourth solo album proves he’s still pretty good at it. While Coombes isn’t keen on trying to recapture Supergrass’s sylvan magic in the streaming era – their final album, Release the Drones, remains unfinished and unreleased – he sounds as youthful and engaged as he did in those cassette tape days.

Much of the baroque experimentalism that powered Matador (2015) and World’s Strongest Man (2018) has been dialled down, but the band’s intoxicating, questing spirit throbs through the strongest suite of music Coombes has assembled in 20 years. Gorgeous, heartfelt pieces dedicated to his wife and kids (Don’t Say It’s Over, Not the Only Things) nestle up next to heartfelt, gorgeous songs about lizard metamorphosis and murdered middleweight boxing champions. The latter, Sonny the Strong, brings the sharp edge of sadness and regret that has often studded his songs fully to the fore, and is one of the best things he’s ever done.

Watch the video for Sonny the Strong by Gaz Coombes.

Contributor

Damien Morris

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Supergrass: ‘We’ve always been about manic energy’
Britpop veterans Supergrass are back on the road – the Observer catches up with them in Amsterdam

Nosheen Iqbal

23, Feb, 2020 @10:00 AM

Gaz Coombes Presents: Here Come the Bombs – review
Former Supergrass frontman Gaz Coombes brings out his experimental side on his solo debut, but can't help filling it with tunes, too, writes Caroline Sullivan

Caroline Sullivan

17, May, 2012 @9:00 PM

Article image
The 10 best teen pop singers
After 19-year-old Lorde’s Bowie tribute at the Brits, we look at other notable young performers

Jude Rogers

04, Mar, 2016 @12:05 PM

Article image
Gaz Coombes: I should Camus

Gaz Coombes, once the cheeky, cheery Supergrass frontman, now reads French authors and writes brooding songs about bombs. By Dave Simpson

Dave Simpson

06, May, 2012 @5:30 PM

Article image
Gaz Coombes: Matador review
The former Supergrass singer puts his powerful pop voice to good use in this diverse, confessional album, writes Jon Dennis

Jon Dennis

22, Jan, 2015 @9:15 PM

Article image
My week in pictures: Gaz Coombes

A week in the life of the musician

06, Feb, 2011 @12:05 AM

Article image
Danny Goffey: soundtrack of my life
The Supergrass co-founder – now leading Vangoffey – on Dexys Midnight Runners, Inspiral Carpets and Pink Floyd

Interview by Alex Flood

31, May, 2015 @7:00 AM

Article image
The Killers: Pressure Machine review – their best album in years
Frontman Brandon Flowers channels his Utah childhood on this lush, uncharacteristically reflective album

Damien Morris

15, Aug, 2021 @12:00 PM

Article image
Gaz Coombes: ‘It felt good that life was speeding up’
As Supergrass return to festival stages, their frontman remembers his younger days, from the majesty of Spacemen 3 to love letters via mixtapes

As told to Ben Beaumont-Thomas

16, Jul, 2021 @8:00 AM

Article image
Gaz Coombes: ‘Britpop was overblown – there were only a few decent bands’
The former Supergrass man talks sideburns, stealing his daughter’s musical ideas and why he’s a secret cage fighter

Harriet Gibsone

04, Feb, 2015 @4:51 PM