SUMMER FICTION: Perfume Paper

Lead off single from, Himalaya, the splendid sophomore LP from Philly-homeboy-turned-Brooklandian Bill Richinni’s Summer Fiction, due out June 16. This is how God intended the electric guitar to sound. They play the Boot N’ Saddle on June 20th.

PREVIOUSLY: Summer Fiction is the new nom-de-rock for South Philly bedroom pop autuer Bill Ricchini who has recently returned from a five year hermitage of domesticity, home-improvement and crock pottery with a self-titled debut full of rumors and sighs and fallen lovers outlined in lipstick traces. Breezy, bright and eminently tuneful, Summer Fiction picks up where Ricchini’s previous releases — 2002’s Ordinary Time and 2005’s Tonight I Burn Brightly — left off. Lush with deftly-turned nods to Burt Bachrach, Brian Wilson and Ray Davies, Summer Fiction is pure pop for the kind of now people who sleep with copies of Village Green Preservation Society and Pet Sounds under their pillow in case of a fire. Check out this groovy-cool video for the album’s catchy lead-off single “Chandeliers MORE

PREVIOUSLY: The dot com meltdown and subsequent layoffs have created a new leisure class of young people. And while many in this jilted demographic may spend their days shuffling freshly updated resumes like a Vegas card dealer, a precious few see unemployment as a gift. “I welcomed it as an opportunity to do something with my life that I really wanted,” says Bill Ricchini, who lost his job at verticalnet.com in Horsham over the summer. What Ricchini really wanted was to be the next Brian Wilson, or at least Elliott Smith. And Ricchini’s debut disc, Ordinary Time–a beatific, hushed-pop song cycle that details a history of amazing letdowns–finds him in the right neighborhood. (PW‘s Joey Sweeney recently declared Ordinary Time one of the best albums of the year in a 2001 pop music wrap-up for Salon.) A self-described “heart-on-my-sleeve guy going through some shit,” Ricchini says he lost his girl, his job and ultimately, his way, in the space of just a few short months. “The album is about being 27 and asking yourself, ‘Where do I go from here?’” he says. MORE

SUMMER FICTION RECORD RELEASE PARTY @ BOOT AND SADDLE JUNE 20TH