Tracklist (CD)
1 | | Park Avenue | | 3:50 | 2 | | Pleasurized | | 3:39 | 3 | | Psycho-Future | | 3:32 | 4 | | Black Hole | | 4:17 | 5 | | Roxy | | 4:20 | 6 | | One Firecracker | | 3:48 | 7 | | Speedway | | 3:44 | See more tracks8 | | Exorcisto | | 3:56 | 9 | | Vogue Thing | | 3:54 | 10 | | Push The Fader | | 4:02 | 11 | | Exile | | 4:20 | 12 | | Cowboy's Orbit | | 4:04 |
* Items below may differ depending on the release.
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Review Like seventies rock bands caving to the threat of disco, today's guitar heroes are striving to adapt to DJ culture, asking a new generation of fans that ever-important question, "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?" Girls Against Boys were born into the Washington, D.C., indie-rock scene in 1992 but immediately rose above the frumpy amateurism of their local counterparts with dense, lust-powered grooves. Now based in New York, the foursome has forsaken most of its slithery melodies and shivery reverb for pummeling machinery, humming keyboards and spotty turntable… Read More action. Freak*on*Ica, GVSB's sixth release and their major-label debut, is filled with barroom grit, but they have dumped their love affair with all things seedy and blue in favor of mechanized chaos and arty, sinister angularity. Produced by Nick Launay of Birthday Party and PiL fame, the album's layers of guitar and samples make songs like "Black Hole" sound almost industrial in their fury, while songs such as "Park Avenue," with its building beat, climax like a sweaty dance floor. Scott McCloud's voice is still gravelly and rich, but he's often obscured by processed noise and superfluous-sounding DJ scratches. Lyrically, McCloud's street themes (ironic or not) get tiresome. In "Cowboy's Orbit," he tosses out terms like "East coastin', West coastin'," and in "One Firecracker" he rasps, "Kick it!' like a tired Beastie.
Though Freak gels in places, more often than not it's uncomfortable and self-conscious. This album may be a needed transition for a band that's always experimenting, but Girls Against Boys were already leagues ahead of (and far sexier than) their guitar-wielding peers. (RS 788)
LORRAINE ALI
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