Boys and Girls in America

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (559 ratings)

We’re sorry. This album is unavailable for download in your country (United States) at this time.

ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 40:27

eMusic Review

Avatar Image
Laura Sinagra

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
A muscular band flirts hard with jukebox heroism.
Label: Vagrant Records

Back in the late '90s, a burnt-out A&R guy told me he was jealous I lived in Minneapolis because it had the "most beautiful boys and girls in America." Back then the city also counted a beautiful, jabbing, jabbering punk band called Lifter Puller among its delights. That band's frontman Craig Finn named the third album of his new band, the Hold Steady, for Minneapolis kids, so worthy of hot-fingered Kerouac reverie. In his NYC ex-pat incarnation, Finn has risen to bard-band godhead by cataloguing their charms, hurtling his snow-plowed Twin Cities scene dreams — full of imperial losers, re-lapsed Catholics, smacked-out hoodrat friends and hangover headaches — into epic Springsteenian spinouts of invincible, yet reliably evincible youth.

Having left Minneapolis's Block E for E Street back on Separation Sunday, Finn and his muscular band flirt still more overtly with jukebox heroism here. "Chips Ahoy!" rockingly outs love as an anxious racetrack bet, and the cheeky "You Can Make Him Like You" grudgingly admires those insouciant girls who simply let their "boyfriend deal with the dealer." The beer-teary "First Night" could be the "Same Auld Lang Syne" of the faded indie-rock regency, and if fellow topophiliac Sufjan Stevensread more »

Write a Review55 Member Reviews

Please log in before you review a release. Log in

user avatar

Great Bar Band

mpgoroff26

If you are a huge fan of Springsteen type bands, this is for you. The Hold Steady's Craig Finn writes a lot of songs about places and girls. Boys and Girls in America is the best of their 4 albums and has plenty of songs to check out such as Stuck Between Stations and Chips Ahoy. If they come through your area, they are great live

user avatar

Watch out.

paultaylor_2009

Classic rock that extends into the territory of "epic" while retaining what we most love about classic rock: its homeliness and relatability. The album opens with hit single "Stuck Between Stations" that is not as grandiose as other tracks but has the sound of a band already arrived. The next track is similarly strong and its playful tone (the song is about a race horse named Chips Ahoy) with its background shouts "Aaaahaaahaa" endears the listener. Arguably, the best point of the album are its last three tracks, where the buildup from the previous tracks is rounded out in a masterful close. Get the whole album - you won't regret it!

user avatar

Better lyrics would make this good

skinny0ne

The Hold Steady is a mix of Southern pop and Bruce Hornsby. The singer is a blend of Bruce Springsteen and Michael Stipe. It all kind of works well except for the lyrics. The singer is too busy talking about partying and getting high that it taints the other good songs on the album. Hopefully this band will mature since a lot of it is actually pretty catchy.

user avatar

I wonder if,

jct1

it's weird that I think "First Night" is one of the greatest piano-driven rock ballads ever written?

user avatar

Better than The Accomplices?

spikegolden

No, but similar, and, at times, almost as good.

user avatar

Album-Superb Emusic Audio Quality-Sub-Par

NonaFMec

Don't know about you but the crappy quality of the .mp3s really stunts the repeat nature of this album. Maybe it was ripped and distributed in the first weeks of release with bad quality? All I can say is it's frustrating hearing all the limitations from when I got it from emusic. And it peevs me off.

user avatar

Gina & Eric

Christianity

However earnest the thirtysomethings of The Hold Steady are, they fail to ignite any real emotion, which is why it will come as no surprise when you hear their music at the end of a teen drama on the CW. This may have already happened; I don't know.

user avatar

Great

Jsquared91

After the first light listen, I was already psyched about deep listening to this for years to come. If you are an indie kid who loves springsteen, this is for you. If not you should still try Chips Ahoy - "I love this girl but I can’t tell/When she’s having a good time"

user avatar

hold steady still steady

redbecca

I've been waiting all year for the new Hold Steady record, and I loved what I heard of it when I saw them at Irving Plaza on Oct 1. This album has more big "rock anthems" than their previous ones, and lyrically it breaks new ground (for them - it's not just all drinking and rehab this time). I hear the Springsteen influence, but this is no redux. The Hold Steady are one of the tighest, most interesting rock and roll bands playing right now.

user avatar

Fun to Listen to

T-Tone

I have been listening to this album for a while. The songs have some good hooks, and you have to like the singer's voice. I'm just concerned that their subject matter is kids doing drugs. I'd hope for more interesting subject matter. The lyrics aren't deep, but they do paint a picture of the boredom of teen life addled with drugs use. This is a fun listen, but I doubt it will become a part of my permanent favorites.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Media Guide

Those looking for Separation Sunday “part two” may be disappointed by the huge sound Boys and Girls in America has (the band’s moved to Vagrant); it’s not much of a concept record, and it’s not as Catholic, but all those struggles are in here just beneath the surface (and sometimes on top of it). One of the ballads here, “First Night,” begins with a piano and an acoustic guitar lilting a rather loose melody that gives Craig Finn the support he needs to get out of his pent-up, novelistic, wordsmithing mouth. All of these characters are young, desperate, and fleeing from their inner fear, except for Holly who is wise enough to tell the protagonist that “words alone never could save us”….and then “cried when she told us about Jesus.” The piano fills out that unfillable hole in Holly and the rest, no matter where they run. Finn can do nothing but repeat his lines and find a last verse somewhere to let the song just fade into silence, because it never really ends. Boys and Girls in America is a sophisticated shambles. There’s still a barely-on-the-rail feel, despite the literate compositions. Finn’s always either behind or ahead of the beat, but it’s alright, his bandmates can more than handle that because they’re as engaged as he is. There are a few guests, and even a horn section on one track, and the classic girl group chorus call and response from Dana Kletter and her gorgeous voice. There’s real sadness in the Wall of Sound and chanted chorus in “You Can Make Him Like You,” which examines everything from addiction to betrayal, to the insecurity in love that can push someone over the edge, never to return. Thin Lizzy makes a return on “Massive Nights,” complete with roiling bass as Finn opens the whole escapist mix, swinging and setting up a hedonist’s dream: “The guys were feeling good about their liquor run…” There are low expectations and drama where only the music counts. The tune turns back on itself when the singer is trying to convince himself and the huge, wailing, responsorial chorus, that something so utterly suburban could be cool, until “She had the gun in her mouth/She was shooting up at her dreams/When the chaperone said that/We’d been crowned/the king and the queen.” And it just ends. The chorus doesn’t repeat. Elizabeth Elmore’s and Dave Pirner’s character triplet vocals on “Chillout Tent” help to create a sprawling narrative. Finn’s the narrator, the other two are such broken and wasted — even OD’ed — people; they kiss urgently, which is alternately “sexy…but kinda creepy.” The song doesn’t really work, but it’s brave as hell as an experiment. The reason this record is worth embracing, and even celebrating, is because it’s an honest to God rock & roll album. It exposes in the first and third person what it means to grow up right now in the midst of suburban waste. It’s angsty, but Finn’s got a sense of humor, and the band can play their asses off. That they so readily embrace rock history as a means of unfolding Finn’s stories suggests that “cool” and “indie” are simply terms in the larger dialogue. This is a smoking little record. Its focus is small, but reach is large; it’s a winner. – Thom Jurek

more »