Pretty Girls Make Graves
Amoeba Music, 1855 Haight (at Stanyan), S.F.
Thursday, Sept. 11, at 6 p.m.
The show is free
831-1200
The Fuse and Nighthawks open for PGMG on Friday, Sept. 12, at 9 p.m. at Cafe Du Nord, 2170 Market (at Sanchez), S.F. Tickets are $10; call 861-5016 or go to www .cafedunord.com
Thanks in part to the creative production of Phil Ek (who produced some of indie rock's most famous recordings for Modest Mouse and Built to Spill, among others), what was formerly your traditional brand of Fugazi-influenced angry guitars and busy drums now contains left-field segues of piano and organ texture, pockets of funky drum-traversing, and dynamics that take whole songs to build. But production technique can't take all of the credit. Singer Andrea Zollo's vocal melodies show a diversity lacking from many indie rock bands'. Sure, she still crowds the record with dissonant girl-punk screams and croons, but in between these vocal bursts are mature, major-key phrases that exemplify a solid foundation of pop knowledge. It's the juxtaposition here of dissonance and beauty that mimics the true nature of a pretty girl.
While the Seattle quintet's new record offers an ample dose of the riff-heavy emoting heard on 2002's Good Health, the group's songwriting skills have clearly improved. PGMG has figured out how to be honest about its emotion without coming off as cheesy or confessional. In the band's hands, we are all forced to submit to The New Romance, the one where the girls and graves are all jumbled into one cohesive, exposed spectrum of love, sex, death, and neurosis.
Tags: Reviewed, Reviewed, Phil Ek, Built To Spill, Modest Mouse, Seattle
