A second debut album. Following to their quite different sounding finnish sung debut album The Kings Of Hong Kong is the first english 22-Pistepirkko album. On this album the trio from Utarjärvi, a village of Northern Finland, lay-out the early basis of what has turned into their eclectic signature sound. After a first test on their 1986 single Ou Wee! they go deeper to their roots of rock, which, according to the band, includes easy rolling organ riffs, maracas and tambourines. The emphasis is clearly a garage rock'n'roll sound. Some inspirations are obvious, Bo Diddley jungle rumble, Buddy Holly guitar strumming, some country influenced tunes Horseman's Son and even more the Hank Williams styled ballad Don't Try To Tease Me balance this speedy album nicely. Their scope is wide and showcases their playfulness and interest in experiments. With their motorcycle, gallop and gunshot sound effects, they sounded bewilderingly like the girl-band The Shangri-Las, even though 22-PP’s tempo was as twice as fast and the vocalist male.