Review
Dartz!
This is My Ship

Deep Elm (2007) Tohm

Dartz! – This is My Ship cover artwork
Dartz! – This is My Ship — Deep Elm, 2007

From what I can tell, Dartz! is the U.K.'s shot at Q and Not U. However, their British accents, along with more of a Bloc Party feel, lessen the gap of similarity between the two groups. Some of the guitar work on This Is My Ship, the Teesside trio's debut, also reminds me of a lazy Minus the Bear, using tapping, hammer-on and pull-offs to achieve the sound. Where Minus the Bear's Dave Knudson is incredibly accomplished (he pioneered this technique in the late Botch), it is evident that Dartz!'s guitarist, Henry Carden, admires the skill, but has not mastered it. I'm interested to hear any guitar work of the sort, so this quality, found in songs such as "Harbour" and "Cold Holidays," keeps me satisfied.

The Q and Not U comparison is not my own review-writing contrivance. This Is My Ship's press sheet specifically gloats, "[The songs] 'Prego Triangolos' and ' St. Petersburg' should give you an idea of which dynamic, spiky Q and Not U-esque school of indie rock these boys attend." While these two songs are enjoyable, Dartz!'s influences are all too glaringly obvious to want to continue listening after the album finishes. Knowing that sounds from "Prego Triangolos" and "St. Petersburg," along with other songs on the album, seem to have been borrowed from Q and Not U's No Kill No Beep Beep reminds me that I'd rather be listening to Dartz!'s influences. The vocals on "A Simple Hypothetical" sound exactly like those of Bloc Party. I don't know much about the band, but I do know I've heard comparable music and vocal harmonies on their debut, Silent Alarm.

Sometimes it's necessary to combine more than a few influences in one's own music, or at least not mimic the artists' unique subtleties - even Q and Not U's "wooo!"s are imitated on This Is My Ship. If Dartz! added some of their own flavor to their already flavorful soup of favorite artists and influences, I'd be more inclined to give them another listen.

If Dartz! isn't going for an original sound but wanted to join the wave of artists who produce dance-oriented punk/pop, they've succeeded. If you listen to Dartz! and don't know about the late Q and Not U, you've been cheating yourself out of the pioneers of the sound.

5.3 / 10Tohm • August 20, 2008

Dartz! – This is My Ship cover artwork
Dartz! – This is My Ship — Deep Elm, 2007

Related news

Dartz! - "Fantastic Apparatus" Video

Posted in Videos on November 26, 2008

Dartz! - "Once, Twice, Again" Video

Posted in Videos on December 7, 2007

Deep Elm Signs Dartz!

Posted in Labels on May 30, 2007

Recently-posted album reviews

Miller Lowlifes

Pinch Hitters
ADD Records (2025)

The debut album from Florida punk band Miller Lowlifes features a vintage baseball theme, best enjoyed with a can of cheap domestic beer in hand. The metaphor fits, as Pinch Hitters focuses on the American dream -- and where it stands in 2025. The vintage educational TV audio clips add to this past-meets-present theme. It's an album that's equally about … Read more

Art Brut

Sorry, That It Doesn't Sound Like It's Planned! Battling Satan, 2009 - 2020
Edsel Records (2025)

I’ve never reviewed a box set before but Art Brut released my favourite sprechgesang anti-art-punk album of the early aughts so I figured I’d give it a go. 2005’s Bang Bang Rock & Roll placed Art Brut among the “Art Wave” scene but was more post-punk revival than “Indie Sleaze”. Argos has cited Jonathan Richman and Axl Rose as his … Read more

The Slow Death

No Light To See
Don’t Sing Records (2025)

Few bands have as fitting a name as The Slow Death. They play forlorn, self-deprecating punk that’s heavily influenced by lonesome country. The music itself is more driving and punchy, but many of the lyrics would fit just well in a somber old-timey country ballad. It’s forceful music that punches inward instead of at The Man. The first song is … Read more