Archive | November, 2023

LE SSERAFIM – UNFORGIVEN

28 Nov

LE SSERAFIM is quite comfortably my favorite thing in K-Pop right now. Their fashion and choreography are immaculate, their attitude is fully on-point and their pop is just so much more experimental than anyone else in the space. You see this in their K-Pop cuts. “Eve, Psyche & The Bluebeard’s Wife” and “UNFORGIVEN” are K-Pop chartbusters and rightfully so but you can see how omnivorous their taste is. The tracks constantly surprise with unexpected beats and breaks and they pull from a ton of influences.

They’re even willing to play out of K-Pop outright. “Blue Flame” is very “American Boy” and the strong “FEARNOT” could be a Taylor track. Their ear is evident across the album. Like Seo Taiji, it’s not just that they take many inspirations but that their ear for good music is impeccable and their ability to consume and integrate many sources is incredible. That they can do all of this and package it with the best K-Pop visuals that I have ever seen is absurd. There’s still a lot of roughness to this album and it’s somewhat of a loose bag but this is as exciting of a statement as you’ll get.

Blondshell – Blondshell

19 Nov

Blondshell is why you always root for the indie band. It’s personal, it’s idiosyncratic, it’s clever and it’s excellent lo-fi rock and it’s not shy about any of it. Right from the opener, “Veronica Mars,” Blondshell is clear that she’s going to talk about what she wants and she’s going to do it well. The line “Logan’s a dick / I’m learning that’s hot” is succinct, packed with meaning and the kind of line that can redefine your relationship with a beloved series. More interesting still are the guitar screams that end the song and the fuzz it delves into.

They follow it with the much slower “Kiss City” with the expertly delivered “Kiss City / I think my kink is when you tell me that you think I’m pretty” but return quite well to a more riotous energy in “Salad” and “Sepsis.” Blondshell does a great job moving between speeds from song to song. “Sober Together” slows down the tempo in order to deliver a very personal story underpinned by excellent, fundamental rock.

Blondshell finds a lot of ways to stick with you after a listen. Snippets of the music or the lyrics surface without warning during your day and they’re welcome every time.

PinkPantheress – Heaven knows

13 Nov

Sometimes, you just cannot force a square peg into a round hole. This could have been a bedroom pop album in the way of something like Clairo’s debut album. That would have allowed her to deliver something short and focused and something that would stay more tightly defined within the sound that she got traction with. Heaven knows clearly has larger pop ambitions and while that might very well be in her future, the result right now is an album with plenty of strong moments, but not enough interesting music to carry the full project.

This comes up particularly strongly in the songs with features. You can see how these were designed for crossover appeal. However, the Central Cee verse just drags down a song with clever moments, but one that was already struggling to hold up its own weight. Similarly, I felt that the Ice Spice feature, while a cultural moment for both of them, is not one of her best.

PinkPantheress has moments, especially in songs like “Feelings”, with very compelling sounds and she’s still way too exciting to write off, but this album isn’t the breakout she wanted it to be.