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July 12, 2008,
Recorded in Albert Hammond Jr.'s native New York, "Como Te Llama" is the solo Stroke's follow-up to his lauded 2006 debut, "Yours to Keep." The album is filled with big guitar noise and mildly incongruous but not unpleasant mixtures of modern riffs ("Rocket"), new wave basslines ("Victory at Monterey") and retro hooks and melodies ("Miss Myrtle"). Like any solo record by a member of a groundbreaking and unique band, it's easy to hear Hammond's influence on the Strokes' music. The set's two opening tracks, for instance, contain familiar trilling guitars and vocal reverb, and the guitar lines mimic the melody in a very recognizable style on "The Boss Americana." But "Llama" has a much poppier flavor than anything the Strokes have ever recorded, once again setting Hammond apart from his gritty rock bandmates.—Lavinia Jones Wright


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