Sugar Ray's 1999 album 14:59 shows a divergent style. Their third
album showed an alarming overhaul in their approach, practically
moving Sugar Ray into a new genre. 14:59 steered them from
their metal shellac toward a calmer, melodious pastiche of
songs. The band on 14:59 has versatility nailed down better
than your grade-A wedding band: "Every Morning"
bounces with the acoustic pop gentility of their 1997 hit
"Fly," while "Falls Apart" and "Personal
Space Invader" reflect influences from Synchronicity
and Men Without Hats. 14:59 also favors the leaner, faster
punk of Green Day in "Aim For Me." There's even
a frighteningly faithful cover of Steve Miller's "Abracadabra."
If there's one criticism of 14:59, it's that if one listens hard enough they'll
be playing "Sounds Like..." for many songs. In that
sense it's almost a parody; the inclusion of two comic songs
entitled "New Direction" (one death-metal, one circus-tent)
help that assessment. Finally, though, 14:59 has such catchiness
and charm that it's a guilty pleasure of high order, and a
bigger step than one might have expected from Sugar Ray.
Sugar Ray now comes in a special limited edition release, including free
bonus disc – "Falls Apart (Radio Edit)", "Every Morning (
Acoustic Live)", "Someday( Acoustic Live)" and "Fly( featuring
Supercat).