by Roch ParisienFive years down the road from the School of Fish debut's hypnotic grooves, dreamy lyrics\u002Fmelodies, and chunky guitar with the occasional spot of feedback and backwards riffing, Josh Clayton-Felt mines a more casual, relaxed, and eccentric approach on Inarticulate Nature Boy. A solo recording in the most organic sense, Clayton-Felt gave birth to Nature Boy in a home studio setting while performing all the instruments, often intuitively rather than through any previous experience. There's an attractive tip of the hat to a timeless, post-punk vibe, guitars meshing with keyboards (in this case a vintage Wurlitzer) with vague references to Bryan Ferry, the Fixx, A Flock of Seagulls, and ABC without the new romantic poses, electronic-age-alienation pretensions, and with better lyrics -- a vein of art-rock fused to a singer\u002Fsongwriter tradition. Highlights run from the breezy, exotic Soon Enough to the title track's articulate hand-clapping rhythm. But the real memory engraver here is Trumpet, a naively infectious ode to one of the instruments Clayton-Felt approached in these sessions for the first time. The track serves as a more introspective variation on the superficial call to action Just do it.Ultimately, it's the fresh, unassuming, intelligence of Inarticulate Nature Boy that brings me back to it. Without sounding anything like either of them, Clayton-Felt falls into a loose class of former-band-frontman solo artists like Michael Been (the Call) and Ian McNabb (the Icicle Works) who develop a small but deservedly loyal cult following. If anyone out there, just to prove me wrong, chooses to start a campaign to make Nature Boy a huge hit rather than a tiny cult phenomenon, please let me know so I can be first in line to buy a second copy.