Con Law

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Con Law album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 33:57

eMusic Review 0

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Andrew Parks

Director of Merchandising

07.21.09
Bright and brilliant pop act earns New Orleans its indie rock stripes
2009 | Label: Park the Van / The Orchard

As rich as New Orleans 'musical legacy is, NoLa's indie rock rep doesn't reach much further than Belong's dollops of distortion and the demented puppet shows of Quintron & Miss Pussycat. That's about to change with Generationals. At least it should: the duo's soda shop pop should work its way into the playlists of people who sorely miss the golden-oldies era of American Bandstand as well as all things Phil Spector.

Daniel Black of the Oranges Band is to be thanked for the Spector part. While Ted Joyner and Grant Widmer are the group's creative core, Black produced their hooky songs with the same attention to detail that's made the Daptone Records roster such a bona fide source of retro soul sides. The main difference is the vast breadth of Generationals 'reference points, extending all the way from those harmony-driven '50s discs to the junk shop synths and studio trickery of old Of Montreal albums (The vocoder effects and shuffleboard beats of "Bobby Beale" sound like they were beamed straight from Kevin Barnes 'brain).

To the delight of anyone into filler-free pop albums, Con Law obliterates the idea that New Orleans natives should sit back and mourn the… read more »

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When They Fight, They Fight...

SenatorB

I heard "When They Fight, They Fight" on KCRW while driving around one Saturday afternoon, and it was stuck in my head for the next two weeks. Check it out if you dare

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HOw Do They Do It?

heartart

Generationals somehow mix Squeeze, the Shangri-Las, Joe Jackson, and Echo and the Bunnymen into a grouping of tight melodic songs with interesting lyrics. It's like they're starting a new genre; IBP - Intelligent Brit-Pop. Abbreviated favorites: Nobody, Fight, Wildlife, It Keeps, Habits.

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You wanna fight!?

cbass116

When they fight, they fight is a great song! Party!!!

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Not Bad . . .

funoka

Got my two-year-old dancing.

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the Beatles were on 40 years ago

hernan

Really to call this a novelty...I'd rather go back to my Sargent Pepper's or anything of that era to get some authentic indi-beat or whatever!

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They Say All Music Guide

Did the Generationals invent a time machine, zoom back to the mid-’80s, and bring their debut album Con Law back with them? Probably not, but you have to hand it to Ted Joyner and Grant Widmer — the vintage “alternative pop” influences of their music sound so natural and unaffected that it’s tempting to imagine they simply found some unknown product of the era — when this sort of hooky but angular, nasal-voiced music was all the rage — through a wrinkle in time, and passed it off as their own work before it could find its way into heavy rotation on 120 Minutes. Joyner and Widmer clearly recall that folks who were into such things also liked to dance, and there’s a solid R&B undertow lurking beneath the surfaces of songs like “When They Fight, They Fight,” “These Habits,” and “Bobby Beale,” and the electronic accents on the latter aren’t the least bit out of place, even though most of the tracks have a more organic sound and feel, from the horns on “Nobody Could Change Your Mind” to the acoustic guitars and brushed snare drums of “Faces in the Dark.” Though the Generationals officially comprise only two people, the sound and feel of Con Law is spacious and lively, and producer Daniel Black and a handful of guest musicians have helped to give the recordings just the right amount of polish, and allowed the arrangements to bring out the fine details of the melodies. And it’s the melodies that are really the key to Con Law — the Generationals clearly know how to work their college rock obsessions, but their songs are good enough to not suffer in comparison to the vintage acts they so clearly love, and that’s why this debut is worthwhile, even if you’re not nostalgic for the era of the sideways haircut. – Mark Deming

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