Sister Hazel probably deserved more from AAA radio than the cup of coffee they got with 1997's "All for You." They write strong hooks, and cultivate the same easily accessible sound that brought silver platters of success to dudes like Rob Thomas and Adam Duritz. That said, Sister Hazel might be leaning a little much on the easygoing with 2004's Lift. The album is a pressed pair of chinos for the headphones, wrapped in tastefully intellectual packaging (a Thoreau quote? Come on....) and moving easily in a wrinkle-free landscape of impossibly dull rock. Sure, the pause before "Surrender"'s chorus crackle is energizing and true. And "I Will Come Through" is capable enough as Flying-V funk for squares who think Lenny Kravitz is too black. "Green," too, is at least as catchy as Train, so why s...