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Why You So Crazy
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Why You So Crazy
Current price: $25.99


Barnes and Noble
Why You So Crazy
Current price: $25.99
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After releasing two relatively restrained albums -- 2012's wistful
This Machine
and 2016's smoothly trippy
Distortland
-- in a row, it was inevitable that the
Dandy Warhols
would throw caution, and cohesion, to the wind. Granted, style-hopping is a more expected form of expression for this band than picking a single sound and sticking to it, but from its title to the '30s pastiche of its opening track "Fred and Ginger,"
Why You So Crazy
quickly alerts listeners that this is
the Dandy Warhols
at their most eclectic. The band's fusion of country and electro-pop makes for surprising highlights like "Highlife," a glitchy, rowdy twist on the band's legendary hedonism made even more distinctive by
Zia McCabe
's twangy lead vocals. "Sins Are Forgiven," which could be a ballad for space cowboys, is one of the album's best balances of irony and sincerity. Amidst these chameleonic sounds,
the Dandys
are savvy enough to include a couple of tracks that play to their proven strengths: "Be Alright" is a fine example of their stratospheric pop, while the sinister, vaporous "Next Thing I Know" sounds like a perfect fit for the Veronica Mars reboot. ~ Heather Phares
This Machine
and 2016's smoothly trippy
Distortland
-- in a row, it was inevitable that the
Dandy Warhols
would throw caution, and cohesion, to the wind. Granted, style-hopping is a more expected form of expression for this band than picking a single sound and sticking to it, but from its title to the '30s pastiche of its opening track "Fred and Ginger,"
Why You So Crazy
quickly alerts listeners that this is
the Dandy Warhols
at their most eclectic. The band's fusion of country and electro-pop makes for surprising highlights like "Highlife," a glitchy, rowdy twist on the band's legendary hedonism made even more distinctive by
Zia McCabe
's twangy lead vocals. "Sins Are Forgiven," which could be a ballad for space cowboys, is one of the album's best balances of irony and sincerity. Amidst these chameleonic sounds,
the Dandys
are savvy enough to include a couple of tracks that play to their proven strengths: "Be Alright" is a fine example of their stratospheric pop, while the sinister, vaporous "Next Thing I Know" sounds like a perfect fit for the Veronica Mars reboot. ~ Heather Phares