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Paper Television

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (343 ratings)
Paper Television album cover
01
Pile Of Gold
2:13 $0.99
02
Parantheses
3:33 $0.99
03
The Big U
2:32 $0.99
04
The Long List Of Girls
2:55 $0.99
05
Bonjour Jeune Fille
2:50 $0.99
06
Babay (Eat a Critter, Feel it')
3:09 $0.99
07
Eat Your Hear Up
2:14 $0.99
08
Pardon Me
3:13 $0.99
09
Fists Up
4:14 $0.99
10
True Affection
3:23 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 30:16

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eMusic Review 0

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Douglas Wolk

eMusic Contributor

Douglas Wolk writes about pop music and comic books for Time, the New York Times, Rolling Stone, Wired and elsewhere. He's the author of Reading Comics: How Gra...more »

04.22.11
Indie synth-pop at its most likable.
2006 | Label: K Records / SC Distribution

Performance artist Khaela Maricich's favorite theme is likability — people trying to be liked by potential lovers or actual lovers, and sometimes people making themselves so likable they get chewed up and swallowed — and her thin, innocent-sounding voice is the closest singing can get to a wide-eyed, smiling, palms-up gesture. The Blow used to be a more-or-less solo project of Maricich's, and now it's a duo of Maricich with drums-and-electronics guy Jona Bechtolt. Her collaboration with Bechtolt is also a likeability makeover for the Blow, which has started taking the cues for its arrangements from old synth-funk and new wave, with a few marching-band breakbeats thrown in (especially on "The Long List of Girls"). Who doesn't like that?

The second or third or fourth or fifth Blow album, depending on how you count (and whether you count the album Maricich originally released under the name Get the Hell Out of the Way of the Volcano), is loaded with great first lines: "I must admit that I'm a little bit afraid of your relationship with the universe," "I guess I'm on the long list of girls who love the shit out of you," "Pardon me, but wasn't that your heart that… read more »

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seriously...

definition

this is one of the best albums ever. download it in its entirety. or "pile of gold", "parenthesis" and "true affection" would be good places to start. then "pardon me", "long list of girls", and "the big u" would come next...then the rest of the album.

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Completely Addictive

a47danger

Short, sweet, and perfect. I want to listen to this perky album over and over until my ears fall off. A wonderful discovery, thanks to eMusic!

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Get yer Blow

MrFike

This poppy electronic romp is a welcome breath of fresh music-air in the current stuffy bpm and over-synthesized electronica atmosphere. Fun and rocky, ultimately it's simple, beautiful pop that The Blow (nice name btw) are peddling here. My favorite tunes are "Parentheses","Babay", "Pile ofGold" and "True Affection". Looking at the titles almost makes me grimace, but don't most good pop songs tend toward cheesiness?

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Blowin' Up

Centeran

Another magical pop recording from The Blow. Less dark and more spacious than previous records, this is one is gonna make them HUGE. It is about time pop music got smart and creative again.

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really funky!

chinaychico

i like it! especially true affections, it is a little funky with a twist. the singer reminds me a little of jenny lewis from rilo kiley but this is a sound all its own.

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eMusic Features

0

Interview: The Blow

By Tobi Vail, eMusic Contributor

The Blow's new self-titled album is Khaela Maricich's first release in seven years. Most artists who pause that long between records struggle to regain their momentum. Instead, Maricich's reinvention of the group — this time with girlfriend Melissa Dyne — is the next logical chapter in girl-penned indie-electronic pop, sure to satisfy anyone anxiously awaiting a sequel to 2006's Paper Television. Their artistic partnership celebrates the camaraderie of commitment through creative work, and sounds like… more »

2

36 Songs To Soothe the Pain

By eMusic Editorial Staff, eMusic Contributor

Whether you're happily married or told Cupid to shove it a long time ago, we can all agree on one thing: to quote the one-and-only Nazareth, "Love hurts/ Love scars/ Love wounds/ And mars." Or something. That's why we went ahead and compiled a list of 36 Songs To Soothe the Pain, from the bloodletting confessionals of Neko Case, Bright Eyes and Sunny Day Real Estate to the melancholic melodies of Sigur Rós, the Shangri-Las… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Ever since Khaela Maricich teamed up with Jona Bechtolt for the Poor Aim: Love Songs EP, the Blow’s avant-pop leanings have been refined with more structure, more rhythm, and more hooks, resulting in a sound that, interestingly, is more forward-thinking than the group’s more concentratedly experimental early work. Paper Television goes even further in this direction, marrying Maricich’s charismatic vocals with beats and arrangements inspired by mainstream and urban pop. This bold juxtaposition of sounds pays off more often than not, particularly on Paper Television’s first two songs. “Pile of Gold” pairs Maricich’s sassy rap-singing with slinky, stuttering rhythms, while “Parentheses” boasts a fantastic chorus and production so bright and immediate that even if the song isn’t played on mainstream radio, it certainly could be. However, the daring that makes Paper Television’s best moments so unique also leads to some experiments that aren’t as successful: “The Long List of Girls” is kinetic, but its beats feel a little contrived and end up stifling Maricich’s singing. The glitchy girl-group pop of “Babay (Eat a Critter, Feel Its Wrath),” which likens the end of a bad relationship to being digested and excreted, is original, but also a lot odder than the songs surrounding it, and ends up detracting from Paper Television’s flow. Still, the album has more uniquely great moments like the danceable, philosophical breakup song “Fists Up” and witty final ballad “True Affection,” than uniquely awkward ones. Even with its subverted mainstream pop productions, the Blow is still very indie pop and very K-sounding; they’re just not trapped in any preconceptions of what that means. Paper Television is exciting and accomplished, the album where the Blow goes from being interesting to being addictive. – Heather Phares

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