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Beat Surf Fun

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (39 ratings)
Beat Surf Fun album cover
01
Twee
3:23 $0.99
02
Glitter & Twang
4:10 $0.99
03
Christine, ND
3:18 $0.99
04
Wild Bikini
2:34 $0.99
05
DIY Queen
4:19 $0.99
06
Cowgirls on Parade
3:12 $0.99
07
I Kept the Beach Boys
2:27 $0.99
08
Orange Cake Mix
1:50 $0.99
09
Knockout
1:55 $0.99
10
Radio Theme
0:46 $0.99
11
Sent to the Moon
4:17 $0.99
12
Who Needs What
3:15 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 35:26

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user avatar

Excellent Album

thurston81

I agree with the review above. This is the album that got me hooked on Tullycraft and now they are one of my favorite bands. I can listen to this album several times through in a row. To the list of standout songs I would also like to add Glitter & Twang, Knockout and Who Needs What. Now that most of the album is listed as standout songs take a listen the preview and discover the best band you've never heard. I highly recommend Disenchanted Hearts Unite as well.

user avatar

Beat Surf Fun is Fun

m0nkey

For the most part I really like this album. I like it because it's catchy, poppy, and fun yet not overproduced. Some may not care for the 'lo-fi'ness of some of it, but to me it adds to refreshing feel of the album. Some (IMHO) standout tracks: Twee (of course) Wilde Bikini and Sent to the Moon. I also like to sing along with Orange Cake Mix. Do yourself a favor and at least listen to the preview.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

When ethnomusicologists of the future look back on the cult phenomenon that was twee pop, they need go no further for defining moments than “Twee,” the opening track on Tullycraft’s wonderful Beat Surf Fun: A catalog of icons and totems that includes nods to Sarah Records, 14 Iced Bears, and the Pastels’ Aggi Wright, its quintessentially adenoidal vocals and manic strumming culminate in the rallying cry “You can keep your punk rock, ska, rap beats and house, f**k me I’m twee!” It’s fitting that such a statement of purpose would originate with Tullycraft, one of the true pioneers of American twee pop and, as of Beat Surf Fun’s 2002 release, one of its few remaining proponents. Between its fizzy lyrics, brittle guitar riffs, cheesy Casio keyboards, and primitive rhythms, the record seems very much out of touch with contemporary pop; its ebullience and innocence hark back to a time that now seems very long ago. But sometimes, nostalgia can be a breath of fresh air. – Jason Ankeny

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