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Alt-rock smart music from kids too young write songs this evocative. This first album from the Northern California quintet provides an impressive introduction to the next generation songwriter. There's NO WAY they're only 13.
Genre:
Rock: Adult Alternative Pop/Rock
Release Date:
2010
Descendants of Billy
Population 5
© Copyright-Population 5
(884501312714)
Record Label: P5 Music
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'Descendants of Billy' takes you through the looking glass to a land where kids contemplate darker visions of contemporary life. From the exploration of pragmatic faith in 'Thank God For Science,' to the indignity of receiving compassion from the one who caused you pain in 'Virgin Birth of Sympathy,' to the frustration of taking another day to leave someone in 'Mr. Hate,' to the Dali-esque portrait of one person's 'Dream,' this journey introduces the first works from a very promising Northern California band and firmly establishes Sam Griffin-Ortiz as a young singer-songwriter to watch out for.
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Awesome band. Not your ordinary kids.
author: ErnestGO
Here's what they said in The Monterey County Weekly:
"Teen rock band Population 5 crank out a big sound that's savvy beyond their years, like the title of the opening track on their debut album Descendants of Billy--it's called "Thank God for Science." They sport an enviably big sound and lush, crisp production. "Virgin Birth of Sympathy" sounds like they've been listening to The Strokes. But influences only go so far. Thirteen-year-old songwriter Sam Griffin-Ortiz was a finalist in the 2009 International Songwriting Competition for "Dream," a 6-minute ballad that starts off like a military funeral march on mushrooms and swells into an anthem with cutting lyrics ("I'm scared straight cuz I got no fear...Got an empty life Jesus can't save...Bobby's little dream home with the blood spot on the floor") that make you scratch your head and ask, "A 13-year-old wrote that?" "Run Away," sung with deadpan rock ennui by Emma Griffin-Ortiz shreds like Lenny Kravitz jamming with Zep and Queens of the Stone Age. When she chimes in on Sam's songs with her counterpoint harmony, it conjures Exene and John Doe from X. Nevermind that they're kids, though it's an intriguing novelty, these youngsters just plain rock."
I couldn't agree more.
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