Black Pompadour

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (10 ratings)
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Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 47:11

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elegant, clever pop

bombycilla

Just downloaded this and haven't even finished listening to it once through, but my early impressions are that it reminds me of the starlight mints (both the songcraft and the vocals). Also sounds a bit like the Aluminum Group. At times the clever chord changes and nifty guitar licks are ALMOST a bit too arch, too self-conscious, for my taste, but in the end their prettiness and elegance get the better of me. So far my favorites are a couple slow ones, Rice Scars and Lost Solid Colors (both of which feature nice female backing vox), and Mogul's Wives, which reminds me of Midlake or even Black Lipstick, the way the guitars flirt with chaos toward the end of the song. Oh, and I just figured out who it reminds me of more than anyone else (mostly because of the vocals): The Ladybug Transistor. If you like any of the bands mentioned above, i'd say check this out.

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just takes a fewl listens

digimonk

This took a while to sink in but after a few listens I love it... a melodic Nick Cave meets Elliot Smith?

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ehh

dyndi

amazing low voice.. but i dont like the lyrics too much

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They Say All Media Guide

Windy city auteur Jim Elkington’s Zincs project sounds more like a full-time occupation on the group’s artfully urban and understated third outing, Black Pompadour. Any and all inflections of the British folk-rock that Elkington brought with him to Chicago from the U.K. have vanished. A heady mix of mid-period the the and Element of Light-era Robyn Hitchcock & the Egyptians, Pompadour’s strengths are often subtle enough to miss the first time around. Spacious opener “Head East, Kaspar,” with its driving toms, minimal chord changes and laconic vocal delivery is pure atmosphere, the beginning of a long road trip that promises a memorable day but has no intentions of taking you outside the city limits. It, like album highlights “Coward’s Corral,” the spooky “Rice Scars” the jazzy “Finished in this Business” and the sunset closer “Rich Libertines” show a band that is remarkably succinct and wholly efficient in fleshing out their chief songwriter’s dark wit with parts that are so dead-on that they don’t really appear until the third or fourth spin. This is a sleepier record than 2005′s Dimmer, but it rewards the careful listener with enough waking dreams to fuel a hundred overcast Sunday mornings. – James Christopher Monger

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