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    Tegan & Sara – Sainthood

    The Quin sisters are always up for some good referential digs, be it to the Material Girl in the broken-strummed “Paperback” or to themselves when crooning “Go steady with me/I know it turns you off when I get talkin’ like a teen” on “On Directing.” In either case, the irreverent, snide wit and easy self-deprecation prove to be an effective, if surprising, fit for Tegan and Sara’s brand of genial indie-pop, elevating Sainthood beyond mere snappy diversion. (Read the Full Review)

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    Devendra Banhart – What Will Be

    Banhart’s immanence has always been limited by the weirdness of his music and the size of his promotional arsenal. No more, though. Banhart jumped to a major label this year, and What Will We Be, his first recording on Warner/Reprise, marks the beginning of the end of his transition from Oh Me Oh My’s primitivism to mass culture’s sonic boom. The title What Will We Be suggests resignation, reluctance even, to this development. But its contents show a commitment to the cause, a final leap from the fringe to the fore.

    The eccentric still lives to some extent. What Will We Be includes songs written from a child’s point of view about love and intimacy (“Chin Chin and Muck Muck”), silly lyrics set to seriously constructed tunes (“Willamdzi”), plastic pronunciation and wordplay (the insertion of additional syllables in the couplet “wild when/smiling” on “Can’t Help”), Spanish cooing (the moody “Brindo”), and, of course, warbling in that all-shook-up vibrato. (Read the Full Review)

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    Fuck Buttons – Tarot Sport

    Tarot Sport represents a subtler, more mature approach to songwriting and a sharpening of their craft. But moreso, it marks a comprehensive stylistic shift for the duo’s sound, from experimental noise with a buried pop sensibility to a sort of modernized electronic take on classic post-rock structures. And impressively, they’ve made these changes without sacrificing any of the genre-straddling adventurousness that made them intriguing in the first place. (Read the Full Review)

    Jack Johnson – En Concert