
The Pink Spiders put their money where their mouth is.
The Pink Spiders - Teenage GraffitiPosted by Tim Karan on 08-Sep-06 @ 01:30 PM
[4/5] By now, you probably already know the Pink Spiders' Cinderella story, which finds the band being transformed from obscurity to full-blown rock stardom (at least in their heads) literally overnight. However, while that fairy tale may be a cliché, the music on the band's major-label debut, Teenage Graffiti, is anything but. In the course of 13 songs, the band tackle full-on rock assaults ("Soft Smoke"), '70s garage ("Nobody Baby") and power pop ("Little Razorblade") with equal aplomb. Frontman Matt Friction is able to simultaneously evoke Axl Rose and Rivers Cuomo, yet he still manages to keep Teenage Graffiti remarkably cohesive (save for the inexplicable Beatles ode, "Adalae"). Dangerous enough for outcasts but safe enough for suburbia, the Pink Spiders have crafted a pop masterpiece with Teenage Graffiti. Where they'll go from here is anyone's guess. (SURETONE/GEFFEN) Jonah Bayer
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Also in this issue:
- The Format
- The Futureheads
- Guster
- Joan Jett & the Blackhearts
- Muse
- Sound Team
- Valient Thorr
- Bouncing Souls
- The Bronx
- Catch 22
- Dead To Me
- Good Riddance
- Less Than Jake
- Mission Of Burma
- Rise Against
- Cex
- Cloudland Canyon
- Arrington de Dionyso
- The Golding Institute
- Hot Chip
- Mr. Lif
- Six Organs Of Admittance
- Regina Spektor
- The Acacia Strain
- Celtic Frost
- Enslaved
- Greeley Estates
- Knut
- Satyricon
- Brightblack Morning Light
- CSS
- Dirty On Purpose
- The Handsome Family
- Pony Up!
- Portastatic
- Scanners
- Strays Don't Sleep
- Other sections...



























[4/5] By now, you probably already know the Pink Spiders' Cinderella story, which finds the band being transformed from obscurity to full-blown rock stardom (at least in their heads) literally overnight. However, while that fairy tale may be a cliché, the music on the band's major-label debut, Teenage Graffiti, is anything but. In the course of 13 songs, the band tackle full-on rock assaults ("Soft Smoke"), '70s garage ("Nobody Baby") and power pop ("Little Razorblade") with equal aplomb. Frontman Matt Friction is able to simultaneously evoke Axl Rose and Rivers Cuomo, yet he still manages to keep Teenage Graffiti remarkably cohesive (save for the inexplicable Beatles ode, "Adalae"). Dangerous enough for outcasts but safe enough for suburbia, the Pink Spiders have crafted a pop masterpiece with Teenage Graffiti. Where they'll go from here is anyone's guess. (SURETONE/GEFFEN) Jonah Bayer

