Category: CD QuickTakes (Page 125 of 149)

Goldcure: Portuguese Prince

You might think Goldcure is sort of a silly name for a band – and you’d be right – but when you stop to consider that these guys used to call themselves Lillylock Timber, it doesn’t sound so bad after all. The Austin four-piece’s debut album, Portuguese Prince (names are clearly not this band’s strong suit) tries to wed Wilco, Travis, the Verve, U2, and the Beach Boys; as you might imagine, it comes nowhere near achieving its goals, but that doesn’t mean it’s a bad album. In fact, it’s actually surprisingly good – what comes across at first as a rather generic first effort reveals itself, after repeated listens, as a deceptively simple collection of 21st century classic rock songs. The band’s got a knack for stately, slow-building anthems, ringing harmonies, and wide open arrangements – and they lucked out in landing Austin legend Stephen Doster behind the decks, too. Doster, who was working with Pretenders guitarist James Honeyman-Scott at the time of his death, says he heard “unfinished business” when he listened to Goldcure – which, as any self-respecting rock nerd could tell you, is pretty heavy praise for a baby band. Damn if they don’t hold up underneath it, though. Goldcure lacks the immediate power of its influences, but give ‘em a few years – and a few more songs like “Rubber Inside” and “Lucky to See” – and they might just get there. (Sorin 2008)

Goldcure MySpace page

Woven: Designer Codes

Listening to Woven can be extremely annoying, and not just because their lead signer can’t sing (although that plays a large factor in it). Woven is so annoying because each of their records are textbook examples of how to squander potential. They’ve shown promise ever since their 2001 EP debut EPrime to become a great electronic act, maybe even a mainstream version of Aphex Twin. However, instead of embracing their inner glitch, the group continues to try and combine their natural talent for breakbeats and killer loops with generic, utterly boring alt-rock straight out of the late-’90s post-grunge handbook. Much of the blame for the band’s failure to successfully merge the two decidedly very different genres should be placed on singer Ory Hodis. There hasn’t been a signer this bad in a band this good since Einar’s days with Bjork in the Sugarcubes. Hodis seems to have two styles, whisper sing/speak and falsetto yelling/whining, and he can’t pull off either. Songs on Designer Codes are completely ruined by him. “Perception Whore” and “Inhale” are awesome IDM-inspired bits of insanity, kind of like Radiohead’s Kid A with some balls. But the second Hodis opens his mouth and unleashes his inner sensitive alt-rock bitch, the songs are totally ruined. Hodis should shut his mouth and Woven should either recruit a new lead singer or seriously consider reinventing themselves as an instrumental act, since that is one area they need no help in.

Woven MySpace page

Samantha Crain: The Confiscation

For a girl of such tender years – being all of 20 in fact – Samantha Crain boasts a surprisingly old-fashioned approach. Her five-song EP, tellingly-titled The Confiscation, sounds like it was recorded in an antebellum parlor, with everyone sitting in a circle and playing into a single microphone. The ambiance is casually nonchalant and sometimes slightly askew, complementing Crain’s unfettered vocals, which bring to mind an unlikely middle ground between Bjork’s cacophony and Marianne Faithful’s raspy resolve. Still, the most unusual element in Crain’s musical mix is its set-up. Billing her disc as “a musical novella,” she takes a literary approach with the various tracks, referring to them as chapters rather than songs. This befits the material’s darker rumblings and further adds to the intrigue. The mood is mostly melancholic, reflective of titles like “Beloved, We Have Expired” and “In Smithereens, The Search For Affinity,” two numbers where ache and mourning seem to hold sway. (Ramseur Records)

Samantha Crain MySpace page

Brice Woodall and the Positrons: Sine Wave Sea

They’ve been compared to Radiohead and Wilco, but the only thing Brice Woodall and the Positrons really have in common with either of those bands is that you never really know what they’re going to do next – chords, melodies, and beats are all relative down here in the Sine Wave Sea, and trying to piece together a cogent narrative out of the lyrics is not for the faint of heart. But if they’re guilty of occasionally being too cute for their own good, they’re at least original, and how many times can you say that in pop music? Although it’s hard not to wish they’d stop trying so hard once in a while, or at least come up with something resembling a hook, it’s equally difficult not to respect all the hard work and/or large amounts of interplanetary travel that must have gone into these 11 songs. You can’t dance to it, and it’s only pop music in the loosest sense of the term – in fact, it’s hard to determine just what kind of music it is – but if you’re in the mood to drop in and get way out, you could certainly do worse than Sine Wave Sea. (AEMMP 2008)

Brice Woodall MySpace page

Davina Robinson: The Blazing Heart

Let’s get one thing straight: “Never Good Enugh” might just go down as the best rock tune of 2008. That said, whether or not the world at large catapults Davina Robinson to stardom is anyone’s guess. On this four-track EP, Robinson is billed as “The Rock n’ Soul Chick,” and that’s a pretty good description of her talents. On “Conversations in My Head” she sounds like the female equivalent of both Lenny Kravitz and Terrence Trent D’Arby. The big electric guitars in the mix are definitely what sets Robinson’s music apart from that of others in the “Soul” category. Sometimes, things get a little cliched, as on “Making Love to Your Girlfriend,” whose ‘thinking of another person while getting it on’ sentiments have been done too many times to count before. But overall, this a really solid disc that fans of rockin’ tunes and good singing should easily enjoy. (Plum Wine)

Davina Robinson MySpace page

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