Monday, April 20, 2026
No menu items!
HomeMusicFrog: Frog for Sale Album Review

Frog: Frog for Sale Album Review

For years now, Frog bandleader Daniel Bateman has cited Mozart, Charlie Parker, and Lil Wayne as his biggest influences. The commonality between those three is their extremely prolific output, which he likens to an addiction. “Once you get into a place like that, where you can’t stop, that’s when amazing things can happen,” Bateman told KEXP. Frog for Sale is his band’s eighth album overall and third full-length in just 14 months. While it continues Frog’s recent Americana tear, the album’s liveliness speaks to the process of compulsive creation as a freeing experience, especially when the creator is aware that it’s not the best work of their career. The tradeoff is more room to experiment, trust in instincts, and learning through trying.

Where 2025’s 1000 Variations on the Same Song played with funk undercurrents and The Count leaned toward slower R&B, Frog for Sale is an exercise in cabaret basics. On opener “Bad Time to Fall in Love Again,” Daniel Bateman jumps from piano to bass and guitar, while his brother, Steve Bateman, adds chimes and woodblocks to his percussion arsenal. The duo is strongest when combining that natural swing with the keys; it’s easy to imagine Bateman tipping a top hat and cane like Michigan J. Frog while singing “Max Von Side-Eye” or “All the Things You Get” on a theater’s stage, lost in the bounce of each beat. He’s got a natural instinct for showmanship while manning the piano; it’s as if sitting on that bench is the secret to perfect posture and unending vocal melodies. If only he gave himself more space to trapeze, though, given the dullness of the hooks elsewhere on the album.

No score yet, be the first to add.

There’s a certain admirability to Frog’s cadence as of late. Evading the pressures of living up to past work is a lifelong struggle for some artists, hence writer’s block or scrapped tracklists that turn into discography lapses. If perfect is the enemy of good, then releasing middling attempts is an acknowledgement that artists must push past their mediocre ideas to uncover the gems that lay ahead. Even songwriting’s most heralded giants with extensive discographies can testify: Stevie Wonder diluted a Ghana trip into the thin Conversation Peace, Joni Mitchell lost herself executing a grand concept in Mingus, and even Paul McCartney fumbled a classical album about a Celtic man pondering existentialism and ambient techno loops with near-indiscernible changes on Strawberries Oceans Ships Forest. Not every song can be polished aggressively enough to sparkle.

Getting ideas out of your system to make room for the next potential goldrush doesn’t have to be a slog, or even viewed in a binary of good versus bad. Frog for Sale’s most underwhelming tracks still know the worth of a wry one-liner: The blunt-verging-on-uncomfortable horniness of the protagonist in “Best Buy” earns a laugh with “All good singers purchase Zyns at the 7-11 in the tins,” as does the self-deprecation in the plodding “Professional,” where Bateman concedes “Girl, yes, I’m paid to be bad” before coughing up his band’s name “like the amphibian.” Later, he gets inventive by replicating trumpets using only his lips on “Beg, Borrow, Steal.” Often, his simplest impulses are the most immediately striking, like the acoustic “Yonder This Way Comes.” Hearing Bateman sing with urgency about longing in the sub-two-minute song makes you glad he grabbed a guitar whenever it popped into his head, preserving an idea without overthinking it. In addition to honing his craft, Bateman works as a set decorator and is a father of two, and you get the sense the act of songwriting is becoming as important to him as the songs themselves.

RELATED ARTICLES

Most Popular

Recent Comments