Boys And Girls In America

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (877 ratings)
Boys And Girls In America album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 40:32

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Awful

trasmussen02

I just don't get it. The guy just talks into the mic. I hate it.

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Every new album is their best album

2perishable

My first intro to these guys was Separation Sunday and I was blown away. A few short months later B&G in A came out and I couldn't believe they could get any better. A year after that came Stay Positive. I didn't buy it at first. I am not used to bands putting out this much music. I still hadn't fully digested the last two! So, when I saw they were coming to town I bought Stay Positive. I have to tell you they topped themselves again. So what I'm saying is, this is a four star album, but it's not even their best. I don't drink, but there must be something in whatever they are drinking.

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Am I a lemming? Maybe, but so what!

EMUSIC-0095063D

It's a great introduction to their catalog, from the first notes of Stuck Between Stations, to the staccato guitar chords of Hot Soft Light and through the sing-along atmosphere of "Massive Nights." It was my introduction to their music. The strength of the songwriting is compelling. These are mature songs about characters who make both good and bad decisions... and its challenging music. Give it a spin!

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Review by BarbaricArcticE

EMUSIC-00D85870

Yes, I know, everyone loves these guys and this album. Not I. I hear what they are doing, I just don't feel it. At all. Just my opinion. I think you either really like it or you will find it kind of boring.

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Another Great Find

EMUSIC-01D6772A

I just keep downloading entire albums by The Hold Steady. Lyrics with the wry wit of Tom Waits and a rocking backbeat. I sometimes think these guys must have been taking notes during my high school and college years only I've never been to St. Paul! Get it. Get 'em ALL!

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Wow.

papabeat

Gets better with each listen. One of my favorite albums this decade.

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energy in spades

backlitbee

the music will make you dance, the lyrics either shake your head or smile depending on your own high school experience. awesome straight ahead rock.

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Wild Romp!

greg6711

What a fun listen!!

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Slap your grandma!

Freeboopus

This band ain't yo grandma's band. Eff you grandma! This band rocks my face off!Get this album immediately and listen to it until you are a grandparent yourself.

user avatar

Great Album!

elkthethird

This album is so good, all the way through. After seeing these guys in concert, I know that I will always be a huge fan!

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Those looking for Separation Sunday “part two” may be disappointed by the huge sound Boys and Girls in America has (the band’s moved to Vagrant); it’s not much of a concept record, and it’s not as Catholic, but all those struggles are in here just beneath the surface (and sometimes on top of it). One of the ballads here, “First Night,” begins with a piano and an acoustic guitar lilting a rather loose melody that gives Craig Finn the support he needs to get out of his pent-up, novelistic, wordsmithing mouth. All of these characters are young, desperate, and fleeing from their inner fear, except for Holly who is wise enough to tell the protagonist that “words alone never could save us”….and then “cried when she told us about Jesus.” The piano fills out that unfillable hole in Holly and the rest, no matter where they run. Finn can do nothing but repeat his lines and find a last verse somewhere to let the song just fade into silence, because it never really ends. Boys and Girls in America is a sophisticated shambles. There’s still a barely-on-the-rail feel, despite the literate compositions. Finn’s always either behind or ahead of the beat, but it’s alright, his bandmates can more than handle that because they’re as engaged as he is. There are a few guests, and even a horn section on one track, and the classic girl group chorus call and response from Dana Kletter and her gorgeous voice. There’s real sadness in the Wall of Sound and chanted chorus in “You Can Make Him Like You,” which examines everything from addiction to betrayal, to the insecurity in love that can push someone over the edge, never to return. Thin Lizzy makes a return on “Massive Nights,” complete with roiling bass as Finn opens the whole escapist mix, swinging and setting up a hedonist’s dream: “The guys were feeling good about their liquor run…” There are low expectations and drama where only the music counts. The tune turns back on itself when the singer is trying to convince himself and the huge, wailing, responsorial chorus, that something so utterly suburban could be cool, until “She had the gun in her mouth/She was shooting up at her dreams/When the chaperone said that/We’d been crowned/the king and the queen.” And it just ends. The chorus doesn’t repeat. Elizabeth Elmore’s and Dave Pirner’s character triplet vocals on “Chillout Tent” help to create a sprawling narrative. Finn’s the narrator, the other two are such broken and wasted — even OD’ed — people; they kiss urgently, which is alternately “sexy…but kinda creepy.” The song doesn’t really work, but it’s brave as hell as an experiment. The reason this record is worth embracing, and even celebrating, is because it’s an honest to God rock & roll album. It exposes in the first and third person what it means to grow up right now in the midst of suburban waste. It’s angsty, but Finn’s got a sense of humor, and the band can play their asses off. That they so readily embrace rock history as a means of unfolding Finn’s stories suggests that “cool” and “indie” are simply terms in the larger dialogue. This is a smoking little record. Its focus is small, but reach is large; it’s a winner. – Thom Jurek

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