Giantess
Download links and information about Giantess by Giantess. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 39:53 minutes.
Artist: | Giantess |
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Release date: | 2007 |
Genre: | Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative |
Tracks: | 10 |
Duration: | 39:53 |
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Buy on iTunes $9.90 |
Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Saturday Night | 3:28 |
2. | Seven Years | 2:24 |
3. | Flex of Green | 3:55 |
4. | Einstein of Love | 4:54 |
5. | Stella, Please | 3:32 |
6. | Giantess | 7:09 |
7. | Wheels On Fire | 3:51 |
8. | Hope Springs Eternal | 3:39 |
9. | Forbidden Intruder | 3:15 |
10. | Snake Bite | 3:46 |
Details
[Edit]Growing out of bandleader Stephen Wood's work leading the Battles — and handily avoiding confusion with the other, increasingly more-well-known Battles on Touch and Go — Giantess' self-titled debut features Wood and companions creating an amiable collection of garagey songs both hyperactive and reflective. Wood's approach is loving but a bit hampered by its formalism — much of it feels like the '80s indie rock that in itself was a tribute to '60s rock & roll, and while sound and approach is as sound and approach does, there's almost nothing on the album that hasn't been heard before by any number of bands. As a result, it's the details more than the songs which stand out on Giantess, though often those details are killer, like the stop-start ending and keyboard sparkle on the opening "Saturday Night," a deft shift to Velvets/Modern Lovers-style chug halfway through the winning "Flex of Green." ("Wheels on Fire" — not the Dylan song — does an even better job with that approach; a whole album in that vein might well have been a good path to try.) "Einstein of Love" stands out as the highlight, a slow, heartfelt number with some lovely guitar performances throughout, including a stellar concluding solo. Otherwise, what Giantess feels like in the end is a celebration of everything from Jellyfish's own sharp pastiches to lesser variations on the same, and while that can prompt a smile, it does very little to help the band stand on its own feet.