eMusic Review 0
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 »