Black Taxi pulls up to The Melody Inn

At a Waffle House in Central Arkansas, Guns N' Roses' Appetite For Destruction is playing on repeat on the jukebox. While possibly a little out of place, it's a demonstration of idol worship of sorts for the four men who make up the New York-based band Black Taxi.
Formed in 2007, the band gained a reputation as a fun, danceable live act throughout the five boroughs because of its relentless schedule and, well, being a fun, danceable live act. Adjectives like "frenetic" and "spaced out" have been used to describe those shows, and it's exactly that energy and sense of fun they tried to harness and better incorporate on their new album, We Don't Know Any Better. That's aways a difficult goal since an enthusiastic crowd fuels the show as much as the mood of those performing. Still, they manage to demonstrate their love of a party atmosphere through these high-octane live sets.
Guitarist Bill Mayo says this record picks up where their first album, Things of That Nature (2009), left off. “Having had more experience in the studio, we knew we could have more fun and do more experimentation,” he says. “There's a lot more synths, but it's still very much a rock-n-roll record.”
One listen to We Don't Know Any Better confirms this. The jangly, up-tempo opening track, “Tightrope,” sends the listener down a renewed path toward enjoying the mix of dance and rock, a trail previously blazed by the likes of the Friendly Fires, VHS or Beta, and Two Door Cinema Club. And “Hand” is damn catchy, making surprisingly good use of a trumpet.