Foxygen - Take The Kids Off Broadway
A skittering and twitchy near-debut - much like Bjork, it's hard to really count anything prepubescent, especially when it's not very good - still, these two kids are barely old enough to pick up their instruments and have no real business with this kind of outsized confidence. Foxygen's Jonathan Rado and Sam France "got serious" to make this one, enlisting mentor Richard Swift to help them throw every 60s archetype at the wall to see what stuck. The results aren’t nearly as refined as the band's follow-up, the performances are dodgy and the production more than a little worn out. Regardless, each track is packed with the kind of hooks fans expect from Foxygen and rarely receive, making Take The Kids Off Broadway the rare cult classic that remains a uniquely strange and fun record, even from a band full of cult albums.
A skittering and twitchy near-debut - much like Bjork, it's hard to really count anything prepubescent, especially when it's not very good - still, these two kids are barely old enough to pick up their instruments and have no real business with this kind of outsized confidence. Foxygen's Jonathan Rado and Sam France "got serious" to make this one, enlisting mentor Richard Swift to help them throw every 60s archetype at the wall to see what stuck. The results aren’t nearly as refined as the band's follow-up, the performances are dodgy and the production more than a little worn out. Regardless, each track is packed with the kind of hooks fans expect from Foxygen and rarely receive, making Take The Kids Off Broadway the rare cult classic that remains a uniquely strange and fun record, even from a band full of cult albums.
~8.5
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