Review by Jessi Roti – @JessiTaylorRO
Artist: Teen Mom
Album: Gilly
Links:
https://www.facebook.com/teenmomdc
http://teenmomdc.bandcamp.com/
Washington, D.C.’s Teen Mom, while
adopting the feminized band name, aren’t strangers to their
emotions. The band’s four-track EP, Gilly, explores an understated,
sugary sweetness that only a trio of “sensitive guys” could
produce.
Opening track, “Kitchen” introduces
the band’s lo-fi fuzz, which echoes the likes of My Bloody
Valentine or Real Estate. Toward the end of the six and a half
minutes, a bossa nova vibe breaks up the monotony of the languid,
neo-shoegaze sound. And while there are moments of droning reverb
that leave you wanting a more explosive, shredding guitar or the bang
of a bass drum, the tracks flow together seamlessly enough to act as
their own breaks.
“Prom Song” and “Say Anything”
epitomize the romanticism that the band employs along with the
lushness of the instrumentation, giving the release, as a whole, a
much more expansive feel rather than a static wall-of-sound that most
lo-fi, indie pop falls prey to.
Gilly’s acoustically-driven “Stay
Inside” sounds like the end of summer, or of a summer romance. It
shrugs off any need of something “heavier,” or less pop, as a
truly inspired guitar riff tears up the end of the track. It’s just
nice, like feeling the warmth of the sun on your face. Not to
mention, it could easily fit on now-defunct band, Girls’ final
album.
But here’s the thing, is an EP of
four, semi-static, love songs featuring young, Conor Oberst-like
whispery vocals enough? Is the vulnerability compelling enough to
expand across an LP in the future? Maybe. For a band from D.C., there
is an effortless, west coast cool to Teen Mom’s delivery; a
beach-bum innocence, if you will. The band knows its identity and
knows what it’s doing, but new ground is going to need to be treaded
sooner-or-later.
Teen Mom is going to have to turn it up
to 11.