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Cherry Peel
Barnes and Noble
Cherry Peel
Current price: $13.99
Barnes and Noble
Cherry Peel
Current price: $13.99
Size: CD
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Hailing from the '90s-resurgent Athens, Georgia scene, unofficial home base to the
collective,
is perhaps the least publicized band in the
stable but not because they make the least-worthy music. To the contrary,
is one of the most unabashedly pretty releases from that group, and, in fact, stands apart from most everything in the pop scene due to its simple, unassuming innocence. The vocals of songwriter
are achingly heartfelt and puppyish, and
' songs seem to spring directly out of childhood, or at least seem touched by a childlike yearning, so much so that you can't help feeling all fuzzy inside and perhaps desirous of hugging someone, maybe your mom, after hearing them. And the songs are uniformly expert: "In Dreams I Dance with You" comes across like a cupid-struck Pinocchio's sweet longing; "Montreal" is a wasteland ballad worthy of
; and "Don't Ask Me to Explain" will make your heart palpitate and bubble up into your throat it is so unpretentiously euphonic. The closest cousin to
is probably
, and like that band, the influence of
, particularly
, and
is pervasive, and other '60s music such as Brill Building pop and
("Everything Disappears When You Come Around") and a bit of psychedelia, as well as a pinch of new wave, occasionally reaches the surface of the songs. But
touches on so many other sources than those, such as circus music and, on "I Can't Stop Your Memory," even a bit of jazz, and the entire album has the sentiment and conviction of early-20th century, old-timey, and Tin Pan Alley tunes. The gorgeous lushness of
conceals the bedroom-bred genesis of the entire undertaking. And though it would be easy to dismiss the whole album as so much cuteness,
never hint at irony. They are not mocking pop, they love the form and the chance to express that joy, and that joy is on full display on
like no band since the early
. ~ Stanton Swihart