2011, True Panther Sounds
Girls' second full-length sees indie rock songwriter Christopher Owens and his multi-instrumental sidekick Chet JR White getting better acquainted with the studio and growing more indulgent. All too often, artists follow up a breakout debut with a difficult sophomore outing, and Girls fall prey to the syndrome, overcompensating for average songs with dazzling instrumentation. ItÆs probable that after recording a straight-ahead EP, they wanted to show off their range, and as a sprawling, 54-minute epic, Father, Son, Holy Ghost is decidedly vast, but it also goes completely over the top. ôAlex,ö ôSaying I Love You,ö and ôForgivenessö fit with the æ50s/Americana vibe of the Broken Dreams Club set. ôDieö sounds like a stoner rock version of Deep Purple's Highway Star before it gives way into a Pink Floyd outro. The dreamy organ ballads ôMy Maö and ôVomitö take the Floyd craftsmanship to the next level with a questionable addition of soul singers. Elsewhere, flamenco guitar, Mellotron arrangements, and sweeping guitar harmonies shape simple Merseybeat and soft rock templates into majestic psych-prog-tinged rock numbers. If there is a unifying theme, itÆs that many of the songs start slow and escalate into overblown jams, with extra session musicians filling the gaps. As a duo, Girls felt comfortable like an old, weathered T-shirt, and now they feel like a well-pressed dress shirt with extra starch. The good news is that this album proves they are top-level purveyors of pop. The bad is that the eccentricity that once flowed freely feels forced. ~ Jason Lymangrover, Rovi
Tracklisting
Disc 1
| 1 | Honey Bunny |
| 2 | Alex |
| 3 | Die |
| 4 | Saying I Love You |
| 5 | My Ma |
| 6 | Vomit |
| 7 | Just A Song |
| 8 | Magic |
| 9 | Forgiveness |
| 10 | Love Like A River |
| 11 | Jamie Marie |
Customer Reviews





