Treats

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Treats album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 32:10

eMusic Review 0

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Melissa Maerz

eMusic Contributor

05.31.10
Cheap, lowbrow and dirty — which, of course, makes it more fun
2010 | Label: Mom & Pop Music

The hip-hop beats sputter like someone dropped a boombox in a swimming pool. The gloriously cheeseball riffage could've been dubbed off an old Van Halen cassette. It's cheerleader music for punks. It's punk music for cheerleaders. Either way, when hardcore vet Derek Miller (Poison the Well) hooks up with former teen-pop singer Alexis Krauss (RubyBlue), they make mind-blowing, bleacher-stomping party anthems. There's no art-school posturing here: All the thrills on the Brooklyn duo's debut are cheap, lowbrow and dirty — which, of course, makes them way more fun.

Even the samples go for the gut-punch: Yes, that's Funkadelic's "Can You Get to That" on "Rill Rill." Through it all, Krauss sing-chants every line with such agit-prop fervor, she deserves her own bullhorn (even if what she's chanting is, "wonder what your girlfriend thinks about your braces?"). On "Riot Rhythm," she sounds a little like M.I.A., whose N.E.E.T. label released Treats, except you get the feeling the only riot Krauss cares about is the kind she's gonna start if you don't sing along. True, we can't say how Sleigh Bells' ultra-repetitive hooks will sound after the five millionth time you hear the album. But that only means time… read more »

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Alice Cooper meets Hip-bop Frosty da Hook fromper

XanMan

Well, I needed a fix,(went to my dealer) and afterwards, found myself breaking out the chainsaw, on the kiddie park slide(kidding..wow you are tense) so, I started this trip-hop, listening to their sophomoric album "Reign of Terror" which has a totally different take. I was first thinking I'd mis-tracked, or downloaded something, from Hip-Hop.. Nope, just some great woofer slammin jam, by the duet of the hour. Scratching, samples like I do my ballsac, thump-pumping, with bass, thrash guitar, and voice synth[(it's no wonder TV did them no justice) and I was listening in 7.1 that night.]so where was I. Oh yes, shaking my girls pom-poms, to this freshmen address, to the world

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So much fun...

iammike

Their sound is so much fun, yet so many haters? I guess the sound is a LITTLE intense and extreem, but that is what makes it so good. And not just one song good but whole album good. My favorite album of the year.

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Amazing

RenaissanceMan

I cannot recommend this album enough. Imagine a cheerleading squad on mescaline backed by a metal band. This album will both intrigue and deafen you.

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cheap lowbrow & dirty

briczar

doesn't mean good... and it's not. ugh. nasty/annoying album of the year...

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As viral as herpes

Musical_Cortex

Just because it went viral, doesn't mean it's good. This band is completely overrated. The novelty wears off after one listen. Annoying music with no long-term likability. But, what do you expect when a former emo-band member tries to make an indie record?

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Great single, blah album

smolove

Rill Rill is the only track I will go out of my way to hear. Not a great album, but a great single.

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Cheerleader Hardcore

lipidfish

If you don't mind the needle in the red... all the time... you won't mind this.

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Not bad at all. but...

alocket

I dont see what all of the excitment is about. yes, this album is pretty good. but no, its not anything real new. blend sample heavy hip hop and TOBACCO and this is what you get. even the album artwork looks a lot like something TOBACCO would put out. So, not bad - good in fact. but it doesnt deserve all the talk.

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Compelling and addictive

stopbeatingme

I found this album to be the most compelling music I've heard in a long time. Bold, brash, big beats, challenging and yet compulsively listenable at the same time. Worth all the hype it got.

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They Say All Music Guide

One of 2010’s most attention-getting debuts, Sleigh Bells’ Treats comes on strong. Derek Miller and Alexis Krauss craft a sound that’s all climax, that sounds like cheap stereos turned up to 11 and boom cars that might actually explode. Nearly all the parts of all the songs on Treats are saturated with distortion that makes them feel even louder than they actually are (which is pretty loud to begin with). Yet their approach is far from lo-fi, and it’s worlds apart from the kind of noise pop that looks back to the halcyon days of four-track recording in the ‘90s. Instead, Sleigh Bells claim whatever sounds loud and shiny for their own: their beats can come from electro, rap, or a drumline; Miller’s guitars often sound like they were stolen from stadium rock; and cheaply sampled sounds that could have come from toy instruments pop up more often than not. On top of all these blaring and blurring sounds is Krauss’ unaffected, ultra-girly voice, which acts as the frosting on Treats, sweetening it and holding it all together. It’s an approach that’s as powerful as it is unlikely — her voice could be too saccharine in another setting, and the music could be contrived and too abrasive without her presence. Sleigh Bells have got their formula down and they stick to it throughout Treats, to often stunning effect. Nearly every track here sounds like an event. “Riot Rhythm” is stark and driven by a drumline rhythm; “Crown on the Ground” sounds like a cheerleader chant backed by a sound system; and “A/B Machines,” with its surfy guitars and siren-like synth drills, could be a Chemical Brothers song covered by No Age and what nu-rave should have sounded like. The fondness and flair Sleigh Bells show for recontextualizing and reconfiguring on songs like this and “Straight A’s,” which throws some metal guitar into the mix, make it easy to hear why M.I.A. signed the band to her label (and “Rill Rill,” which samples Funkadelic’s “Can You Get to That,” echoes her own surprise hit “Paper Planes”). On quieter songs like “Rachel” and the soulful “Run the Heart,” Miller and Krauss switch up their approach a bit, allowing her vocals to be the focus of the songs rather than a decoration. Given that Sleigh Bells’ sound is so big — and undeniably exciting — songwriting falls lower on the band’s list of priorities than taking all the dramatic moments from everyone’s favorite songs and turning them into songs in their own right. That doesn’t stop Treats from having a boldness, immediacy, and sense of fun that’s missing from too much other music. – Heather Phares

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