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Wide Open [LP]
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Wide Open [LP]
Current price: $12.99
Barnes and Noble
Wide Open [LP]
Current price: $12.99
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Size: CD
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The hotly anticipated follow-up to the Canadian indie pop outfit's Juno Award-and Polaris Music Prize-nominated 2016 debut,
Wide Open
is a more polished affair than its predecessor, but
Weaves
haven't lost their gift for pairing knotty sonic architecture with gale force charisma. Much of that charm comes from frontwoman
Jasmyn Burke
, a natural scene stealer who can go from feral to heartfelt in the blink of an eye -- imagine
Gwen Stefani
or
Santigold
fronting
TV on the Radio
. That the band operates on her same cosmic wavelength goes a long way in making
work, which it does at least 75-percent of the time. Front-loaded with its most spirited and manic moments -- it gets into your brain early and starts decorating -- from the anthemic "#53" to the dancefloor-ready art-punk of "Slicked" and "Law & Panda," the 11-track set eventually runs out of gas -- it dissolves into a literal "Puddle." Even so,
have a knack for making even the most rote indie rock posturing compelling -- fuzzy, midtempo noise-pop offerings like "La La" and "Walkaway" would fall flat in lesser hands -- and their enthusiasm is infectious throughout, even if that zeal feels a tad refined this time around. ~ James Christopher Monger
Wide Open
is a more polished affair than its predecessor, but
Weaves
haven't lost their gift for pairing knotty sonic architecture with gale force charisma. Much of that charm comes from frontwoman
Jasmyn Burke
, a natural scene stealer who can go from feral to heartfelt in the blink of an eye -- imagine
Gwen Stefani
or
Santigold
fronting
TV on the Radio
. That the band operates on her same cosmic wavelength goes a long way in making
work, which it does at least 75-percent of the time. Front-loaded with its most spirited and manic moments -- it gets into your brain early and starts decorating -- from the anthemic "#53" to the dancefloor-ready art-punk of "Slicked" and "Law & Panda," the 11-track set eventually runs out of gas -- it dissolves into a literal "Puddle." Even so,
have a knack for making even the most rote indie rock posturing compelling -- fuzzy, midtempo noise-pop offerings like "La La" and "Walkaway" would fall flat in lesser hands -- and their enthusiasm is infectious throughout, even if that zeal feels a tad refined this time around. ~ James Christopher Monger