Not Nothing

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Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 32:37

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Marissa G. Muller

eMusic Contributor

Marissa G. Muller has written about music professionally since she was 19, just don't ask about her age now. Her work has appeared in Pitchfork, EYE WEEKLY, Ind...more »

04.12.11
Garage-rock pranksters with drug-fueled lyrics
2011 | Label: Kanine Records / The Orchard

Though their frontman O.J. San Felipe hails from San Francisco, lo-fi outfit Xray Eyeballs' debut record, Not Nothing, sounds less like recent Bay Area garage than a nod to Warhol-era New York. The five-piece band — which includes members of equally fuzzed-out Brooklyn group Golden Triangle — swap tambourines and girl-crazy lyrics for heavy distortion and tales of crazy girls on these compact, bass-spiked lullabies. Rumbling cuts like "Crystal," which sports mosh-worthy drumbeats and bruising guitar riffs has a "Fuck it All" mentality, with Felipe delivering lines like "I can disappear" in a Lou Reed drawl. Thankfully, unlike Reed, Xray Eyeballs don't take themselves too seriously.

Indeed, Xray Eyeballs are garage-rock pranksters, and if their drug-fueled lyrics — which tell of marches fueled by sleeping pills and a tweaked-out ex coming down from crystal meth — risk alienating the soberest of listeners, the seductive, danceable hooks, will draw them right back in. The guitar-spun "Egyptian Magic" and synth-heavy "Drums Not Dead" are late-night anthems that recall, respectively, the La's and Eurythmics. Felipe's female counterpart, Carly Rabalais — who turned up as a guest vocalist on Smith Westerns' Dye it Blonde — helps soften the band's feedback squall. Her background… read more »

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Same licks again and again

theenddecay

Read my full review here: http://earbuddy.blogspot.com/2011/05/earbuddy-review-xray-eyeballs-not.html

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If you like your rock & roll to come equipped with niceties like fidelity, tuning, and vocals that stay in pitch, you need to stop reading now. If you’re not picky about that stuff and just want wild & wanton excitement and sweaty good times, then you should turn to Xray Eyeballs and their debut album, Not Nothing. On it the band bash, slink, and clatter through a batch of songs that have the two things any good rock & roll song should have: loud guitars and big hooks. Add to that snotty, barely under control vocals, a healthy dose of sex, and loads of reverb. It’s a sound that’s been working since the days of Gene Vincent & the Blue Caps, and it works just fine for XRay Eyeballs. There’s just an extra layer of murk that would have horrified Vincent, though Jeffrey Lee Pierce would have totally understood. The album is spilt pretty evenly between songs like “Broken Beds” and “X-Ray Eyeballs Theme” that speed past in a lo-fi garage punk commotion, swampy almost-country ballads that have a creepy, dimly lit quality, and midtempo tracks with girl group-strong melodies (“Big Toe,” in particular). It’s a mix that works like a charm and if they can find it, fans of scruffy, dirty, and not very nice rock & roll will take to Xray Eyeballs like squirrels to a birdfeeder. – Tim Sendra

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