Monday, March 16, 2009

The Ladybug Transistor - Beverley Atonale - 1997


Ladybug Transistor makes delicate music. It's not that the band doesn't go uptempo, just that the sound remains gentle. If hard-rockers are most commonly found thrashing around a stage with a phallic guitar, then Transistor is the guy in the back of the room wearing a black beret and casually bobbing his head to the beat. On Beverley Atonale, Ladybug Transistor delivers a gorgeous suite of gentle, quiet pop music, infused with melody and hooks but never overtaking the listener. The lyrics are esoteric and often incomprehensible, but you gather quickly that words aren't really the point -- the band aims to set a tone more with its sound than with witty wordplay. The album is heavily influenced by the past, by such artists as the Beach Boys and Burt Bacharach -- "Windy" swipes its opening drum riff from Phil Spector and slides effortlessly into a trumpet-driven light pop tune with some great guitar riffs. The production is airy and full of space; though the sounds fit together, they also linger on their own far beyond each song's duration. On the whole, Beverly Atonale is the perfect driving music for a rainy summer day.-AMG



The Ladybug Transistor - Beverley Atonale - 1997/rs

or
The Ladybug Transistor - Beverley Atonale - 1997/sb

1 comment:

Fred G. Sanford said...

yeah.
media fire is great.
thanks for the post also.

dlo you have any STEREOLAB? or any
WHITEHOUSE?

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