A Song For Sunday 17/08/08
Category: Music
Tags: a song for sunday, black kids, I'm not gonna teach your boyfriend
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Category: Music
Tags: a song for sunday, black kids, I'm not gonna teach your boyfriend
Category: Music
Tags: 25 bands that make america cool again, beatbox, black kids, glass candy, nme

Glass Candy Are Literally Very Good
Everytime I’m in Tesco’s I have a good flick through NME magazine to see if they’ve written anything that can get me all irritated. There article on bands that make America “cool again” was filled with 23 pretty shite bands (the exceptions being Black Kids and…) but they redeemed themselves by putting GLASS CANDY in third place. I didn’t know anyone even liked Glass Candy except me — there album doesn’t even have any customer reviews on iTunes.
Anyway the point is Glass Candy’s annoyingly titled B/E/A/T/B/O/X is an amazing, amazing album and you should listen to it.
It’s a fucking party man. The full NME list was:
1. Vampire Weekend
2. Lil Wayne
3. Glass Candy
4. Kings of Leon
5. MGMT
6. Spank Rock
7. TV on the Radio
8. Boy Crisis
9. Black Kids
10. Holy Ghost Revival
11. The Hold Steady
12. Fleet Foxes
13. Amazing Baby
14. Jay Reatard
15. Health
16. The Cool Kids
17. Black Lips
18. Yo Majesty
19. White Denim
20. Telepathe
21. Iglu and Hartly
22. Chester French
23. Girl Talk
24. The Death Set
25. Grace Jones
Category: Music
Tags: black kids, hurricane jane, i'm not gonna teach your boyfriend how to dance, music album review, partie traumatic, retro rock pop, the cure

Formed in Florida back in 2006, Black Kids‘ debut album “Partie Traumatic” pays more than a little homage to 80’s rock-pop band The Cure. Vocalist Reggie Youngblood’s delivery is akin to the style of The Cures very own Robert Smith. Jazz pianos, bass hooks and guitar stabs occupy the album’s collection of 80’s inspired indie-pop tracks. Everything is tied together by the sparse use of a classic synthesizer which will take you back to the glory days of “Just Like Heaven“.
Singles “Hurricane Jane” and “I’m Not Gonna Teach Your Boyfriend To Dance” are strong examples of the type of experience you will get from listening to Black Kids debut release - an eclectic collection of danceable, retro-fueled infectious dittys. The drums are big and driven, the guitars are subtle and lush and the synths are well programmed.
Standout tracks include opener “Hit The Heartbreakes” with it’s wah driven guitar riffs and excellent call and answer vocal layout. “I’m Making Eyes At You” is another excellent track with synth driven soundscapes as Youngblood whines “I’ve been making these eyes now since 1982″.
Fans of The Cure or modern pop-rock will undoubtedly enjoy Black Kids debut release but many will ask the question of when homage becomes blatant plagiarism.
7/10.
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