Pity about the name - which sounds like the kind of thing Marks & Spencer would consider hip for a teen clothing range - but what a good album. Concocted by jobbing soul singers Rahsaan Patterson and Ida Corr and Australian producer Jaz Rogers, it boasts the same melodic pizzazz that makes similarly wonky, thrown-together R&B projects such as NERD and Gnarls Barkley work. Patterson proffers sweet soulfulness, Corr full-bodied grittiness (at times it's impossible to accept that she's Danish rather than American), and Rogers the propulsive pop knowhow. Most tracks sound like they should be singles (four already have been); the psychedelic funk of Walking a Way, and the dirty-minded electro-pop of L-O-V-E, sugary and disposable as they may be, are hard to resist.