Frankie Rose And The Outs

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Frankie Rose And The Outs album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 29:39

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Marissa G. Muller

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Marissa G. Muller has written about music professionally since she was 19, just don't ask about her age now. Her work has appeared in Pitchfork, EYE WEEKLY, Ind...more »

09.01.10
Too brash and too sonically restless to be mistaken for mere revivalists
2010 | Label: Slumberland Records / IODA

A veteran of New York's garage rock scene, Frankie Rose graduates from the tween-y, slightly undercooked crackles of the Vivian Girls and Dum Dum Girls in her latest project with the Outs. This would-be girl group ditches the frills of the Shangri-La's: Margot Bianca's surf-influenced guitar is more in debt to the Seeds' splintering riffs; Caroline Yes's sun-damaged bass lines fuzz like a warped Electric Prunes single; Kate Ryan's whirling between her drum kit, bells and an organ, conjures Sandy Nelson's versatility, and Rose's jagged vocals evoke the soul of Dusty Springfield.

Unlike the masses of current garage rock revivalists, Rose and friends avoid the predictable hook-and-harmony blueprint. "Don't Tred" offers an erupting guitar, fervent vocals and rolling drums. In "Girlfriend Island," Rose and the Outs drown their heartbroken cries in heavy reverb, serrated bass lines and anthemic percussion, the song gradually fizzling down to just a sanguine guitar solo from Bianca. And "Candy," the group's poppiest confection, mocks the girl band trope of lovelorn lyrics: "Candy, oh oh Candy, you're my one true love I've waited for, oh candy!" Rose broods as the Outs bash and clatter behind her. The songs brim with '60s-inspired rhythms,… read more »

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Should have been an EP

indiesoc

Most of the songs here passed by without leaving a mark, the notable exceptions being tracks 3 and 8. I still find the Dum Dum Girls' album to be the most consistently enjoyable of those from the recent ladyfuzz trend.

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Sonic and Soulful

SquidGal

I can hear so many influences...yet these songs are uniquely their own. This band has taken everything good about the previous decades and raised it to the next level. Push play, sit back and enjoy!

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They Say All Music Guide

Frankie Rose and the Outs’ self-titled debut album could have been viewed as a textbook case of bandwagon jumping when it came out in late 2010. The fuzzy, heavily reverbed take on classic girl group pop played and sung by women was quite popular and on the verge of being overdone. Rose was no Frankie-come-lately though; she played drums with an early lineup of the Vivian Girls (and wrote their best song, “Where Do You Run To”), and was in the live version of the Dum Dum Girls (as well as the Crystal Stilts, though she was the only girl in the band). Her credentials being in order is only part of the battle though; she’d need to make a decent album to escape bandwagon-jumping charges. Let the record show that she has exceeded expectations and all charges have been dropped. Together with her band, Rose has crafted something that serves as both a culmination of the girl noise pop sound and a hint of where it could go next. Tracks like “Candy” and “Girlfriend Island” utilize walls of noise, pounding floor toms, and huge AM radio hooks; “Little Brown Haired Girls” has vocal harmonies the Paris Sisters could appreciate; and “Save Me” has all the heartbroken drama of a Spector production. More intriguing are the songs that use girl groups buried under a blanket of hiss as a starting point and go off in interesting directions — for example, the drifting sections of “Memo,” where the guitars linger over the notes while a bed of noise hovers in the distance, and the near a cappella cover of Arthur Russell’s “You Can Make Me Feel Bad” that shows off the group’s beautiful vocal harmonies to full effect. It’s also nice how there seems to be as much Cramps-style rockabilly in the band’s DNA as there is Shangri-Las. Check the shivering guitar work of “Must Be Nice” or the rollicking, car-crash dramatic sound of “Don’t Tred” for confirmation. The droning organs and languid tempos of “Hollow Life” and “Lullubye for Roads & Miles” show a nice range and give the album some depth. Rose probably could have just made a cookie-cutter noise pop record and people would have liked it just fine; that she and the group display lots of sonic imagination, a powerfully strong ear for melody, and a willingness to mess with expectations makes the record something special. Frankie Rose and the Outs have made a record that put her old band the Vivian Girls to shame, and instead of proving to be bandwagon jumpers, they instead made a record other girl pop bands can emulate and someday hope to equal. – Tim Sendra

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