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20120601_fa_02.mp3?orgId=1&topicId=1104&d=353&p=13&story=153924849&t=progseg&e=154055347&seg=2&ft=nprml&f=153924849

Diamond Rugs is one those bands that wants you to think it prizes spontaneity and sloppy good fun more than careful song construction and technical polish. And the album, also titled Diamond Rugs, almost succeeds in convincing you of its sloppy aesthetic, dispensing songs about drinking and carousing only to be left morose, in one's cups.

"Totally Lonely" is one of the few out-and-out downbeat songs on this collection. The rest of the time, even the break-up songs have propulsive power, as in "Hightail," in which a woman took a good hard look at what she was getting into with one of these guys and she "straight up and fled."

Diamond Rugs is now John McCauley's third band, after Deer Tick and Middle Brother, and I admit to a fascination with his blasted-vocal-cord voice. He takes most of the leads on Diamond Rugs, and he has a knack for making hangovers and soured romance sound convincing. I really like "I Took Note" — written by another band, Mandarin Dynasty — in which McCauley details the ways in which a budding artist might prepare to create worthwhile art, suffering for it even as it yields an endearing melody.

With song titles like "Gimme a Beer" and "Hungover and Horny," Diamond Rugs' members dare you to take them seriously. But this album is stuffed with tuneful paradoxes: fast, loud, punk-influenced instrumentation asserting a bravado that cannot disguise a broken heart, regret and pain.

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