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the Kick and Snare
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the Kick and Snare
Current price: $12.99


Barnes and Noble
the Kick and Snare
Current price: $12.99
Size: CD
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The Deathray Davies
have always been an interesting band combining a downcast and often insular lyrical approach with a sometimes sunny, sometimes
lo-fi
and ugly sound, much like a less cheery
Pavement
or a tune-free
Guided by Voices
. Interesting, but missing something important. Their fifth album feels like the sun breaking through the clouds as the band tosses aside any indie pretension and steps unblinking into the big leagues.
The Kick and the Snare
is a glittering, slick, and tough-as-nails
rock
record with hooky tunes, rich arrangements (full of horns, percussion, and funky keyboards), exciting performances, and the best batch of songs
Davies
mainstay
John Dufilho
has yet come up with by far. The first track alone is better than anything the band had done previously:
"The Fall Fashions"
is a tight slice of modern
power pop
that surges and flows like classic
Who
or
Kinks
without sounding a bit like them. Other tracks like the chiming
"In Circles,"
the pounding and heartfelt
"Release the Squid (Box 6),"
the sweet and peppy
"A Calendar Crime,"
and the epic
"Alaska"
are first-class indie with an eye to playing stadiums
. These songs have bite, style, and melodies that stick. Only
"Chainsaw (Denn Die Toten Reiter Schnell)"
lets down the side a touch as it's too monochromatic and sounds like the old
Deathray
. It is just a small blip though; this newly kicking version of the group is a welcome and exciting surprise. If you had written them off as too run-of-the-mill, come on back because things are hoppin' now. If you've never even heard of
the Deathray Davies
, step up to the plate and shoot your shot, because you won't find much better
indie rock
than this in 2005. ~ Tim Sendra
have always been an interesting band combining a downcast and often insular lyrical approach with a sometimes sunny, sometimes
lo-fi
and ugly sound, much like a less cheery
Pavement
or a tune-free
Guided by Voices
. Interesting, but missing something important. Their fifth album feels like the sun breaking through the clouds as the band tosses aside any indie pretension and steps unblinking into the big leagues.
The Kick and the Snare
is a glittering, slick, and tough-as-nails
rock
record with hooky tunes, rich arrangements (full of horns, percussion, and funky keyboards), exciting performances, and the best batch of songs
Davies
mainstay
John Dufilho
has yet come up with by far. The first track alone is better than anything the band had done previously:
"The Fall Fashions"
is a tight slice of modern
power pop
that surges and flows like classic
Who
or
Kinks
without sounding a bit like them. Other tracks like the chiming
"In Circles,"
the pounding and heartfelt
"Release the Squid (Box 6),"
the sweet and peppy
"A Calendar Crime,"
and the epic
"Alaska"
are first-class indie with an eye to playing stadiums
. These songs have bite, style, and melodies that stick. Only
"Chainsaw (Denn Die Toten Reiter Schnell)"
lets down the side a touch as it's too monochromatic and sounds like the old
Deathray
. It is just a small blip though; this newly kicking version of the group is a welcome and exciting surprise. If you had written them off as too run-of-the-mill, come on back because things are hoppin' now. If you've never even heard of
the Deathray Davies
, step up to the plate and shoot your shot, because you won't find much better
indie rock
than this in 2005. ~ Tim Sendra