
If Pines Salad were a dish, it’d be served hot, salty, and straight from the emotional deep fryer. The debut album from Melbourne’s ReeToxA—Jason McKee’s long-simmering sonic journal—isn’t just a grunge-meets-pub-rock banger; it’s a rough-cut gem glowing with lived-in truth. Across 14 tracks, McKee doesn’t ask for permission to feel—he just bleeds, shouts, and plays like he’s got nothing to lose. The result is a gloriously unvarnished collection of tunes that sound like they’ve been waiting three decades to get out of his chest.
From the first seconds of opener “Alcohol,” you know exactly where you are: mid-’90s heartbreak alley with flickering neon, muffled drums from a backroom venue, and an ashtray full of regrets. The guitars coil and unravel like nerves, and McKee’s voice—weathered, broken in, but defiant—grinds against the weight of the lyrics. There’s a sharpness to his phrasing that cuts deeper than nostalgia; this is someone writing not just about pain, but from inside it. The follow-up, “HMAS Cerberus,” tugs the narrative thread tighter, mixing storytelling with grit, landing somewhere between Paul Kelly and Alice in Chains.
But Pines Salad doesn’t live on despair alone. Tracks like “Papa Loves Ladyboys” and “Skateboard Jesus” throw curveballs—darkly funny, weirdly beautiful, and melodically sharp. They balance out the heartbreak with flashes of irreverence and self-awareness. There’s a punch-drunk poetry to McKee’s lyrics—half confession, half late-night bar banter—that somehow holds the whole thing together. His world is one of contradictions: loss and humor, regret and swagger, silence and screaming. That tension gives Pines Salad its bite.
What’s remarkable is how seamlessly old wounds meet new polish. With Simon Moro behind the board and support from some of Australia’s finest session players, Pines Salad doesn’t sound like a dusty demo tape but sounds alive. The production is modern and clear, but it doesn’t erase the grime; instead, it highlights it. You can hear the layers of time baked into every bar, and when poppier sensibilities creep in, à la Olivia Rodrigo or early Foo Fighters, it feels earned—not forced. McKee’s songwriting has roots, and they run deep.
Pines Salad is the sound of someone who’s been through it and lived to write the album they always needed to hear. It’s flawed, fierce, funny, and full of soul. Whether you come for the riffs, the rawness, or the catharsis, you’ll leave feeling like you’ve just spent time with someone who actually meant every word. In a world of overproduction and industry polish, ReeToxA offers something rare: music with a heartbeat, bruised but still beating strong.