Blackblack

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (140 ratings)
Blackblack album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 21:08

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
J. Edward Keyes

Editor-in-Chief

J. Edward Keyes has been writing about music for nearly 15 years, a fact he occasionally finds terrifying. His work has appeared in Rolling Stone, the Village V...more »

09.02.08
Charming, shambling, winsome and winning — Blackblack deliver the perfect sound of imperfection
2008 | Label: eMusic Selects

"I am seriously depressed about my level of energy," Diva Dompe sighs at the outset the aptly-titled "Energy Song." Really? You are? Because if you're low on energy, the rest of us are stone dead, sad pale excuses for viable human beings. Throughout Blackblack Diva and sister Lola (with some assistance from ex-Phantom Planet vocalist Alex Greenwald on guitar) bound, leap, squeal and shout, barreling through eight gloriously ragtag pop songs, focusing on the frayed edges and the big blemishes instead of the shiny centers. Blackblack make imperfection perfect, proudly brandishing ragged guitars, pounding on busted drums and choosing a giddy holler over a practiced croon.

It's the revival of a lost aesthetic, the same kind of ragged charm favored by old-time indie heartthrobs like BMX Bandits and Talulah Gosh and Marine Girls, the order of the day before someone showed up with the soap and water and singing lessons and turned the whole enterprise into a crash course in good manners. "The Most! The Best! The Greatest!" is impish and hyperactive, Diva and Lola belting out the chorus — "The most! The Best! The Greatest! Foreverrrr! Foreeehhveehhrrrr!" — over and over as guitars collide behind them. They… read more »

Write a Review 22 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Anti Folk

Oliveme

Like the Moldy Peaches, Blackblack make anti folk folk. And it is just as funny and just as charming. As a plus, you can play it while small children are around without fearing that you are contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Especially charming, and kid friendly, is their take on Little Bunny Fou Fou. This only barely meets the standard for an LP and we can only hope that its brevity is due to their desire to issue new material.

user avatar

Blackblack

Exiled_from_FLA

This album is definitely different. However, the novelty aspect of the music adds charm to it. It's worth a listen.

user avatar

Great

JBB

These people shine within the motif of the female post punk sound. From the late 70's folk-punk of the Raincoats or the edgy punk of the Slits thought the second wave in the 80's (Throwing Muses, Lush, the Breeders), to the third wave in the 90's (K Records and Kill Rock Stars) to the present version as applied by the Vivian Girls and Blackblack, this wonderfully quirky and creative rock tradition still rides high. I hope a full length album arrives soon.

user avatar

seriously underrated

dan'schic

Clever handmade rock, full of humanity and invention. I suspect that many of the overharsh detractors here can't see past the lack of studio gloss.

user avatar

Groan

popepaul

Refreshingly boring...yet, gay.

user avatar

Progeny of the famous

Kayrandolph

Of course it's lacking. They're the daughters of the Bauhas drummer and were playing Sunset Strip clubs before they were ready and, now, releasing music before they are ready. File under: The Like

user avatar

Saved by Sincerity

BonniePrinceKillme

Here's a 90s throwback that somehow actually works. Listening to this, I just want to see them live because I think the music just simply lends itself to too much cheap beer, wicked bad club b.o., and cute girls in ironic t-shirts. I happen to like all of the above, and to the extent this album sincerely evokes the last 18 years I have spent in said clubs with said beer and said girls, I guess I just feel all warm and fuzzy and nostalgic... Ultimately, I will mine this record for a few gems and I will put them on mixes and they will thereby become burned into my psyche forever... I like that too.

user avatar

sweet, cool and fairy-tale-ish

swizzy

people who say it's amateur are obviously not getting that it's supposed to sound naive and child-like... it's supposed to sound fresh and spontaneous...not like people who spend a lot of time honing their technical perfection, but who spend a lot of time indulging in creativity. It's an overgrown garden of sound with funky weeds and chipped tea cups.

user avatar

awful

DaveP

My goodness, this is terrible.

user avatar

If you love lo-fi

yancey

As I do, then you'll dig this. These songs are totally in the spirit of Sebadoh and the Amps and all of those great, fucked-up pop songs that used to be what indie was about. Diva and Lola are genuine in their intent, and it's obvious. "Honey In Your Ears" and "I Wish I Were a Scientist" are my faves.

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

eMusic Selects: Blackblack

By Alex Naidus, eMusic Contributor

Diva Dompe is busy. Very busy. The singer, songwriter, bassist (and currently sole full-time member) of L.A.'s Blackblack also majors in Biology at Cal State and co-runs a raw-food catering service. Somehow, she also found time to participate in the West Coast 88 Boadrum performance alongside her father Kevin, former drummer for proto-Goth legends Bauhaus, and to embark on two separate one-week tours of Japan. A hectic schedule, sure, but Dompe clearly feeds off of the hustle… more »