60 Watt Kid

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60 Watt Kid album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 62:55

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Amelia Raitt

eMusic Contributor

Amelia Raitt is a former writer for the television program Mr. Belvedere and has been writing about pop music of all colors and stripes for eMusic since 2005. S...more »

04.22.11
60 Watt Kid, 60 Watt Kid
2007 | Label: Absolutely Kosher / IODA

San Francisco's 60 Watt Kid have no need for structure. Over the course of their hour-long debut, songs rise, fall, enter, fade, expand and contract, each of them eschewing hard corners for haze. It's all slow fade in: synths hum and glow, guitars sparkle but never ignite, and voices crackle and fade like static. It's wintertime music to be sure: acoustic guitars flutter down like snowflakes, slow and delicate, in "Going Home," "Time of Mad Scientists" hums and buzzes and pools out endlessly. This is the dreamtime: the perfect soundtrack to early nightfall and long slumbers.

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seefurther

I love this record because it takes chances, it's interesting and it does not conform to any one set of rules. It's very experimental but contains melody. There's a place to connect in this record. It's moody and warm in patches. I love that. I watched some of their web clips and was amazed as they pulled it off as a three piece. Interesting, engaging, thought provoking music. I downloaded completely on a whim. Maybe you should too? Give it a few spins and warm up to it.

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They Say All Music Guide

There is always room, or at least should be, for self-amused types in music, especially if it seems like they actually have some fun while they’re doing what they do. San Francisco’s 60 Watt Kid stand apart just enough from the endless cascade of winsome trippers through the daisies that define too much of indie rock at present because they also sound like they’re having bizarre conversations with themselves and several robots from past decades’ sci-fi films in the next room. It’s not exactly Chrome or the Residents thirty years on and in the same city — arguably too many of the melodies are straightforwardly and sweetly winning as opposed to being buried under layers of tape abuse — but there’s still a little something of that anarchic spirit, one that switches out straightforward and heart-baring earnestness for cryptic bemusement and barely understood vocals. More than a few times the combinations are near gooey in their sweetness — “Ocsicnarf Nas” extends its backward spelling to the backward-masking on the vocals, and it’s all shimmeringly beautiful towards the end in a way that’s nice but not surprising. But elsewhere there are demented Elvis pastiches with more reverb than god, funhouse organs grinding into the dust, and what could theoretically be old-timey melodies but as heard through a fair amount of sonic murk. One of the odder moments — singer Kevin Litrow running off a list of car brand names after asking “What kind of car do you drive?” on “I Got Money.” – Ned Raggett

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