Entries from January 2005

Gwen Stefani, Love Angel Music Baby (Interscope)

January 19th, 2005

Gwen Stefani Love Angel Music Baby Interscope By: Eric Greenwood Solo albums are somewhat gratuitous when your band is still fully functioning. Unless you're planning to redefine some obscure genre, what's the point, other than saturating the market with your ego? Gwen Stefani's venture into solo-land is not without suspicious motive. Her status in the […]

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Tags: review

Jens Lekman, When I Said I Wanted To Be Your Dog (Secretly Canadian)

January 19th, 2005

Jens Lekman When I Said I Wanted To Be Your Dog Secretly Canadian By: Kerry M Oh Jens Lekman, how I love thee, let me count the ways. Your Merritt-like vocals, your Knox worthy lyrical musings, your tinny Glaswegianesque symphonies, your Butterfly Child-like orchestrations and last but not least your lovable Richman inflections. You slyly […]

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Tags: review

Earlimart, Treble (Palm Pictures)

January 19th, 2005

Earlimart Treble Palm Pictures By: Eric Greenwood With lush instrumentation (acoustic guitars, piano, hazy atmospherics) reminiscent of a less quirky Jon Brion soundtrack, Earlimart follows up 2003's Everyone Down Here album with more of the same Elliott Smith-inspired, maudlin pop. Gone are the days when Earlimart would even remotely be compared to the likes of […]

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Tags: review

Dirty On Purpose, Sleep Late For A Better Tomorrow EP (Dirty On Purpose)

January 19th, 2005

Dirty On Purpose Sleep Late For A Better Tomorrow EP Dirty On Purpose By: Kerry M. This Brookyln quintet's catchy lyrics and borderline ethereal vocals poured like honey over shoegazed riffs and shimmering hooks evoke memories of that early '90s sound that propelled so many indie bands into that brief Kendall-approved “120 minutes” limelight. These […]

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Tags: review

Top 20 Albums Of The Year, 2004 (Various)

January 5th, 2005

Top 20 Albums Of The Year 2004 Various By: Eric Greenwood 01. The WalkmenBow + Arrows[Record Collection] Their roots may be in line with traditional post-punk architecture, but The Walkmen rarely stray from a distant, graying out of noise. Hamilton Leithauser's scruffy voice cracks and crackles even when he's singing delicately, while the music sounds […]

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Tags: review