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"They totally peaked with Nothing Feels Good.

“Very Emergency was way too poppy.

How come the Tanner kids don’t look Greek, like at all?"

Friend, do these quotes sound familiar? You’re hanging out, maybe thinking about grilled cheese, when somebody drops an ignorant remark -- they hate post-`97 Promise Ring! FACT: If you replace “Very Emergency” in the middle quote above with “minorities” and switch “too poppy” to “stupid,” you would have a sentence that is not only racist, but grammatically incorrect. Your friends are a hair away from causing a race riot. You have two choices: (1) Find new friends or (2) hit ’em in the face with the soothing sorta-emo indie pop-rock sounds of Electric Pink! Guaranteed to make ’em even rethink Wood/Water! Maybe!

Housed within its metallic, some might even say electric, pink cover is four songs totaling 12.5 minutes. Three of ’em bounce with Very Emergency’s poppy energy, but with a tightness that the EP format specializes in. The title track opens with a simple bassline and frontman Davey von Bohlen’s lispy word play. “Please don’t press that we dress / high heels and loud shoes are a mess / step out with quiet feet / and now I’m pleased to meet / meeting is so hard to do when you’re dead,” goes one memorable verse. The song is pretty much fun from every angle -- to-the-point rock riffs, a hummer of a chorus and those previously mentioned fun rhymes ensure that much. Track 2 and Very Emergency holdover “Strictly Television” sounds like slightly more retro TPR, if only for its punkier drumming. Hooks are still big, though.

The EP shifts for “American Girl (V.01),” a reimagining of the Boys + Girls cut. Though it’s faster and steadier than the original, it’s still the mellowest/slowest song of the bunch, cleansing the palate before “Make Me a Mixtape.” It’s well-placed. So is “Make Me a Mixtape.” Arguably Electric Pink’s catchiest ditty, its pop-minded wistfulness is enhanced nine years after its release. The mixtape was long ago left behind by playlists and CD-Rs, but its nostalgia factor just ups the ante on this, a song about asking a loved one to make a mixtape for a road trip. Like any good driving song, it’s fast-paced and catchy, with some crunchy riffs thrown in. Grown-ass man von Bohlen acknowledges that he’ll never again be 22 (something this 23-year-old knows as well), but that he wouldn’t mind having a mixtape with “something old and something new / something I said or that we did / that reminds me of you.” Later on he gets a little more specific with requests for Hüsker Dü and “something the Cars did in 1982.” He’s even willing to take “Duran Duran Duran Duran” too, sung with such precious honesty. I’m thinking “Hardly Getting Over It,” “Shake It Up,” and “The Chauffer,” but there are probably peppier numbers to commit to tape.

But hey, your stupid friends don’t like catchy songs, right?



People who liked this also liked:
One Day As A Lion - One Day As A LionThe Loved Ones - DistractionsO Pioneers!!! - Neon CreepsFranz Ferdinand - Tonight: Franz FerdinandThursday - Common ExistenceThe Pains of Being Pure at Heart - The Pains of Being Pure at HeartMorrissey - Years of RefusalNew Found Glory - Not Without a FightPJ Harvey and John Parish - A Woman a Man Walked ByThe Rentals - The Story of a Thousand Seasons



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    Posted by Eelsupinsideya on 2009-06-14 07:38:32

    Brilliance from TPR, as you'd expect. "I feel electric pink, in the cheeks, we look like animals, seven days a week". They were quality throughout their releases and I think the fact that people have mixed opinions on the different releases proves that they were not afraid to keep progressing/changing - they didn't get better or worse, they just progressed. A sign of a truly great band. I can think of only one TPR track that I don't like and that was Say Goodnight, Good (?) which just irritates me. Other than that, brilliant.

    Posted by Deadpan on 2009-06-14 06:21:40

    I dare everyone ever to say they don't like Make Me a Mixtape. It's just too damn good.

    I put this on a mix cd, and I got the girl. We broke up later, but the point is it worked. Perfect mix song.

    Posted by bryne on 2009-06-13 15:25:40
    My Score:

    I celebrate this band's entire catalogue.

    Posted by SloaneDaley on 2009-06-13 15:21:32

    anyone that doesn't like Promise Ring post-'97 is seriously deluded and that is fact not opinion.

    Posted by Cox_Attack on 2009-06-13 12:23:38

    I actually love Very Emergency. The Deep South is such a good fucking song.

    Posted by mikexdude on 2009-06-13 02:27:45

    The Promise Ring? Is that a jonas brother's reference lololol

    Posted by greg0rb on 2009-06-13 00:49:48
    My Score:

    Love this review. Love this EP. Love Wood/Water, Very Emergency and Nothing Feels Good. 30 Degrees is a'ight.

    Posted by 1234go on 2009-06-12 21:52:48
    My Score:

    This little EP made me fall in love with them. I could care less about their earlier work.

    Posted by letmesleep on 2009-06-12 18:15:01

    I'm fairly certain that I wrote this.

    I picked up Electric Pink a month or two ago and I can't stop listening to it. The title track is easily one of my favorite Promise Ring tracks of all time. And thats saying something for a dude that puts TPR in his top 3 favorite bands of all time.

    Posted by preston on 2009-06-12 16:47:46

    That first paragraph is awesome. That said, I don't like Very Emergency, but I love Wood/Water. And this was pretty alright.