New Debut
author: Michael Wernette
early squeeze, meets early XTC, throw in a bit of beatles and you have this PLEASURE POP, album! I haven't been this excited about a band in a long time. Sing a long even if you don't know the words, the melody just carry you right along. These are new songs that sound like old favorites. Why isn't this band huge, selling millions of albums!!
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Deserves Emmy, or something
author: Martin White
An absolute killer album, the kind to restore a longtime pop music fan's waning adherence to the power pop cause. Great singing, brilliant arranging - "Disaster," "Shame o," "Yes Impossible" all of Jellyfish standards - impeccable, on the level of Butterfly Jones, Spongetones, Pillbugs - absolute world-class contemporary power pop.
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Frisbie- New Debut
author: Jamie Blackburn
Love it
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The kind of rock and pop that makde living in the 70's not so sucky
author: John Book, Music For America
Infectious is what Frisbie's brand of power pop is, and with their brand new album New Debut (Appendix), they prove why they should be the rightful monarchs of the power pop crown.
They sound like some of the best of the guitar-driven pop bands of the late 60's and 70's, and don't mind wearing their influences on their sleeves, as they do in "S.F.B." when vocalist Liam Davis sings do you remember the cheap trick that you played on me? In fact, much of their sound is reminiscent of a lot of AM gold from the likes of Styx and at least in the title track, some of the vocal harmonies sound a bit like 1971-era Yes. What this band does more than anything is show how well that sound has aged, and that there's nothing wrong with short-but-sweet rockers about love, fear, hope, and getting naked for the fun of it. This is very much music of the now, and it's great to hear songs that are for the most part radio-friendly (with the exception of the you're so fucking beautiful references in "S.F.B.") The melodies and arrangements are well done and the lyrics aren't too deep nor are they disposable. This is the kind of rock that made living in the 70's not so sucky. It's the new New Debut, how the hell are you?
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