Touch Up

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (39 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 39:48

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Bizarre but brilliant

Bensta

You have to love musicians that can sing about cross-dressing, unapologetic voyeurism, and finish up an album with a creepy "Little Hands." Wonderfully written and bizarre. I love it.

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brilliantly addictive

emusicfiend

this band does a great job of blending genres to produce really interesting albums (the person who said they were like tegan and sara mixed with black francis is spot on. there are also elements of lykke li). but more importantly, both albums by this band ("touch up" and "o my heart") are crammed full of the most supremely catchy songs. my favorite tracks are 'legs away', 'train of thought', 'ball cap' & 'dirty town'. one of my new favorite bands!

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so awesome

drew.biehle

One of the best downloads in the past year. Sounds to me like Tegan and Sara singing backup to Black Francis. Unrefined in a really good way.

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why?

lindsayneudorf

why is a canadian band not available to canadians???

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They Say All Media Guide

A remixed, resequenced version of what had been Mother Mother’s D.I.Y. self-titled debut from 2006, Touch Up is an engagingly quirky folk-rock record strongly reminiscent of both the Roches and the trio’s Vancouver compatriots the Be Good Tanyas. The biggest difference is that one-third of the trio, singer-guitarist Ryan Guldemond, is a boy-type person with a voice considerably less sweet than those of his sister Molly Guldemond and family friend Debra-Jean Creelman: his yelping leads on “Verbatim” and “Neighbour” show why Molly and Debra-Jean’s close harmonies are the dominant factor here. But as long as the girls are handling the lead vocals, the songs on Touch Up are charmingly jagged bits of alt-folk very much akin to the Roches’ ’70s and ’80s flirtations with art rock, new wave and modern jazz. The title track in particular, a pop/rock gem with slightly neurotic lyrics about makeovers, would fit perfectly on the New York sisters’ albums. On its own merits, Touch Up has its flaws — Ryan’s weak lead vocals, some distractingly gimmicky vocal arrangements that seem to be hiding the album’s less melodically developed songs — but they’re offset by the trio’s likeably odd lyrical obsessions and playful ease. – Stewart Mason

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