At Home With Cherry Twister

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (35 ratings)
At Home With Cherry Twister album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 57:30

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Stacy Flatt

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Beach Boys harmonies stirred up with a little modern rock.
Label: Lucky Records / CD Baby

Imagine the aesthetic of the '60s and the Beach Boys 'harmonies stirred up with a little modern rock, and that is roughly what you get At Home with Cherry Twister. While heavily influenced by '60s pop bands, the album still sounds fresh and modern, not a rehash of old sounds; it's mostly upbeat, though there are a few slower songs are mixed in for variety and breadth. The harmonies and guitars are layered so impeccably that the album can be sonically peeled like an onion; there's always another vocal part or instrument to find below the melody.

Write a Review 5 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

meh

lurrz

i went through a rather manic power pop phase right around the turn of the millennium when this album came out. it was pretty good timing, but that's about it. i still have this cd and i consider it my one regrettable purchase during my power pop phase. clearly some people dig it, given the reviews below, but poppower pretty much nailed my main beef with it - the whole thing just feels so forced and inconsistent. "charlotte b" is a great song, hampered by cheesy production and vocals that just don't do it justice. i really can't stress how hard it is to listen to this dude sing in his style for an entire album. fountains of wayne and mike viola do this sort of thing MUCH better. for power pop, the songs are too long, the album is laborious, and really it's no secret why these guys faded pretty quick after dropping this turd.

user avatar

top ten power pop

johnnybgoode

the reviews below, while positive, do not do this music justice. cherry twister is truly one of the best power pop (or, for that mater, best rock'n'roll) CDs ever made -truly a top 10 experience. one thing the other reviews do not catch is the power, energy (think early who) inherent in this music. what an exciting uplifting band this was. download it and crank it up on a beautiful Friday Spring afternoon as you crack open that first beer. You will not be disappointed.

user avatar

Powerpop for a new age

Aeschulus

It doesn't sound exactly like your Raspberries or a Todd Rundgren, and I'll agree with another reviewer that it's a bit forced to try and pay homage to the original 70s sound, but Steve Ward's original outing with Cherry Twister is a great "modern" Power Pop experience -- still catchy, if slightly heavier than its 70s forebearers. If you were only to download one song on this, make it Leila -- no, not a Clapton cover -- but an excellent song...

user avatar

Download two songs now

EMUSICdashSomeHexNum

A rigorous and exacting postmodern take on selected essential poprock influences of the mid- to late-60's and early-70's. I recommend you take a minute to whip through the samples, and then, if you can live with some of the vague snarkiness, which other reviewers rightly identify, then download two of the most promising examples. See if they don't grow on you. Overall the positive greatly outweighs the negative. After all, Cherry Twister, like the album liner says, are the postmodern puratins of american pop.

user avatar

pop gun to your head

poppower

this album is included on a few power & indie pop lists here on emusic. personally, the music sounds a bit forced; trying to be clever for clever's sake. when you listen to naturals of the genre (jason falkner, owsley, bleu or even dressy bessy or the excessories) they make the songs breathe and run their natural course. cherry twister seems like they're trying to incorporate all the tricks of the pop trade into one album with inconsistent results. overall a fun listen, but they need to lighten up on the cliches and let the songs speak for themselves.

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

Power Pop

By Stacy Mangual, eMusic Contributor

Combing the melodies and hooks of pop with the power chords of rock, power-pop is a genre that can trace its roots to bands such as the Beatles, the Byrds and the Who. Even Buddy Holly in the '50s helped lay the foundation of the power-pop formula, though it didn't come into its own as a genre until the '70s. Bands like Big Star, the Flamin'Groovies, Badfinger and the Raspberries took various elements of earlier… more »

They Say All Music Guide

The title says it all: Cherry Twister are a homespun pop group, and At Home With Cherry Twister is a collection of their homemade demo recordings. Led by frontman Steve Ward, Cherry Twister embody the D.I.Y. ethic of Ram-era McCartney while sounding like they spend lots of time listening to Beach Boys and Big Star records. The guitars are alternately chiming and crunchy all over this one, with gooey, almost sticky-sweet background vocals drenched over every bridge and chorus. The problem is that it sounds better on paper. Like all too many of their peers, Cherry Twister fail to stumble across anything resembling a truly memorable hook (with a few notable exceptions, such as “Meteorite”). And at 16 tracks, the album is an awful lot to swallow, given the lack of an obvious entry point, and given that Steve Ward’s rather pinched vocals are an acquired taste. Even with these limitations, At Home With Cherry Twister became one of the most popular guitar pop cult records of the late ’90s, showing that Ward’s endearingly quirky songwriting and the Twister’s devotion to ’60s-influenced three-and-a-half minute pop singles certainly reached quite a few listeners. – Jason Damas

more »