More mature, more subdued: well-crafted, if downbeat
John L Murphy | Los Angeles | 10/19/2007
(3 out of 5 stars)
"Imperial Teen takes its time making deceptively chipper music. The lyrics, however, often provide the sour tang under the sweet surface. I was intrigued when the New Yorker described its first LP, Seasick, as "queasy pop," and despite the fact this is probably some of the sunniest music on my often gloomy shelf, the mature lyrics, intelligent themes, and sophisticated wit all burnish this collection, their fourth studio record. It goes by, as most of their albums, quickly, starting off in a Spector-ish flourish, but ending with a downbeat, melancholy tune that takes them off stage gently.
The music lacks the experimental edge that I liked on their second album, What Is Not to Love, and generally melds the straight-ahead but lower-key energy of the Seasick with the polish of their third LP, On. But, overall, it's slower, lower in volume, and more subdued. I'd start, if you are new to the band, with On and then Seasick. This new LP matches these in style, but again, seems less jittery and less brazen.
The accessible, warm, affectionately old-school production, by Steve McDonald (Redd Kross) and Anna Waronker (that.dog) along with the band, heightens the band's guitar-bass-drums set-up, but Roddy's keyboards appear much less prominent than before. I found this not quite a disappointment, but I feel that the band's better served by the higher intensity tunes that allow it to stretch out rather than compress its take on indie pop rooted in 60s styles without aping the feel of the pre-psych, vaguely NYC-street styles that they blend into a more new-wave meets singer-songwriter approach. A song like "Sweet Potato" shows this off best, with lines like "She has a backstage pass but doesn't want to meet the band" and "the carpool lane's open but she's taking the bus" capturing a gal of easy virtue cleverly. Somewhere in our media empire this deserves to be a hit.
Will, singer on most tracks, has improved and has lost his Jersey whine that often marred earlier turns at the mike. Lynn's drums keep a punch with Jone's bass, and the tunes at their best, as in "Room with a View," sound instantly familiar. Glad to see the band's back after five years off; I'd feared they'd disbanded! One song, "Do It Better," sounds to me like I have heard it before on an earlier IT record! It's testimony to the band's talent that they can freshen up pop-rock, at this late stage in the genre, that recalls their influences without imitating them.
"
Awesome
Kari Gritzan | San Francisco | 10/13/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This is their best album since Seasick, in my opinion. Maybe this one's even better. A fabulous album, rocking sonic guitars, Teentastic lyrics. Don't miss this one!!!"
A new album that doesn't suck!
Kirk N. Rahusen | NJ, USA | 11/04/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Everyone's familiar with loving a band and eventually hating their "new album." Imperial Teen is a band that just doesn't follow that rule.
Don't get me wrong, Seasick was their best album. But The Hair, the TV, the Baby, & the Band has everything you loved about the old albums, along with just enough musical progression to make this 4th LP more mature than the 3rd one.
The songs in The Hair feel a little more aged and subdued, but they retain that burnt-out vibe Imperial Teen has always offered. The band is getting on in their years, and the topics they sing about are along those lines. Please understand, when I say the album is a little subdued, I only mean a little. There's still plenty of fun and energetic songs that keep the old band spirit."
Friday nights are good, Saturdays are even better...
B. Rosenthal | North Bergen, NJ United States | 11/01/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Quintessential Indie-Pop at its finest. Thankfully, these wonderful musicians have returned to form, Imperial Teen are one of those bands whose releases you can buy without even listening to, others of this ilk would be Spoon, Sloan, New Porno's, you get the pix. Anyway, the release like their 3 previous, is littered with catchy as hell tuneful paeans, where brevity reigns supreme and the hooks are a plenty. The two gals in the band have much air time, which is a real good thing. I firmly beleive that the best Rock music is that moment when you are hear a song for the 1st time and instantly identifies itself as a classic as like you absolutley heard this one before (check the first song), derivative? Yes, monotonous, hell no!
All four releases - essential.
"
Postpunk Pop
Barrett | Washington, D.C. United States | 10/28/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Punk did a lot of great things for popular music, and maybe one thing not so great: its cynical-when-not-bitter perspective on just about everything (except itself) made wit in rock about as fashionable as love beads. (The Ramones are the great exception, but their humor bascially came down to high-concept adolescent irony. That's no slam: they're possibly my favorite band.) Ever since, rock bands have found themselves either striving for humorless "cred" or settling for lesser status as "pop" acts.
Imperial Teen falls squarely (so to speak) into the latter group. As much as any indie-rock act I can think of, they've taken the pop notion and run with it. But their debt to punk comes through in the disconnect between their big, shiny, filigreed sound (think, Wall of Sound meets the Archies) and their wry acknowledgement of life's pratfalls. "The Hair the TV the Baby & the Band" is possibly their most sheerly charming release yet. The title cut sets the scene of a group of grownups balancing real life with the pop life, and several other cuts echo the theme to some degree. That contrast gives some heft to the ear candy, but you don't have to catch it to enjoy the instantly hummable melodies and almost eerily airy vocals.
Musically, the new disc lacks some of the oomph of its predecessor, "On" (2002), which is probably their best. But "The Hair..." is a ridiculously seductive slice of postpunk pop from a band that, whether fashionable or not, deserves a much larger fan base."