Kimchee
In recent years, forgive my unflattering opinion, it seems that womenin rock forgot how to, well, rock. Piano crap like Sarah McLachlan andFiona Apple can only spawn weaker alternatives, with other femaleartists doing soul rip-offs or beach rock retreads that do not nor cannot satisfy the hunger in our souls to hear a woman who can rock. Andhere, without any warning, comes Seana Carmody of Swirlies fame with agreat solo debut. Sure, she slides into familiar territory on some ofthese songs, and it doesn't necessarily rock you into oblivion, but itdoes a great job of creating a mood and keeping you there. And, on sometracks, most notably on 'Tailgate', the rock happens in a big way, andalmost as a kiss off to non-believers. For the most part, I suppose youcould call this shoegazer rock, as it does provoke that response onmost of these songs. But Carmody has a great voice, and gets so closeto the sound of others without parodying or copying that it comes outsounding completely original and unique. The double-tracking of thevocals allows for minor differences that punctuate some songs on abizarre note, and the saccharine quality that may annoy after a whilefrom some doesn't grate when Carmody expresses it. Mostly, this musicis full, raucous, and moving, with short jabs of loud aggression. Onthe eight-minute-plus closer 'Stay Awake', however, it excels to awhole new level of noise, meandering and crashing on top of itself withan interesting Mogwai-esque sustain, though it seems the noise'spurpose was to add time to this too-short disc. It's an accomplisheddebut of pretty good songs worth sampling, though.

 

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