eMusic Review 0
Pixies bassist Kim Deal was blowing off creative steam with her side project the Breeders when she inadvertently wrote 1993's best alt-rock anthem, ensuring she'd never be known simply as "Pixies bassist" ever again. "Cannonball," the centerpiece of the Breeders' second LP, blends a lazy riff with a wall of fuzz and delightfully nonsensical lyrics in magical proportions. The rest of the disc is just as much rock 'n' roll fun: The sweetly explosive "No Aloha" and pounding "New Year" are distortion-dipped ragers topped by the Deal twins' sweet vocals.
The album's singles are all standouts: "Saints" glides along its bent-note guitar line and stop-on-a-dime cut-offs, while "Divine Hammer" is the Deals' version of a pop song, a happily bouncing tune sung in slightly askew harmony (original Breeders member Tanya Donnelly left before the recording of Last Splash to start up Belly). Two of the record's 15 tracks are instrumentals — the punky bash-a-thon "S.O.S." and surfy "Flipside" — while "Roi" and "Hag" go light on the lyrics in favor of stoned-out strumming. For a change of pace, the Breeders include their country-rock cover of the Ed's Redeeming Qualities ditty "Drivin' on 9." But when the violins fade, the… read more »