Articles

THE WHISPERTOWN 2000 > Swim

It’s obvious why L.A.’s The Whispertown 2000 have made friends with indie princess Jenny Lewis (Rilo Kiley). Their music is firmly entrenched in Lewis’ brand of lazy, sparse, fist-raised feminine country-folk.

Label: ACONY
[Rating: 3]

It’s obvious why L.A.’s The Whispertown 2000 have made friends with indie princess Jenny Lewis (Rilo Kiley). Their music is firmly entrenched in Lewis’ brand of lazy, sparse, fist-raised feminine country-folk. But while Lewis’ honey-touched voice locks you in, W2000’s lead vocalist Morgan Nagler’s grinds you to a halt. Its wayward pitchiness is an unneeded distraction (Nagler’s voice is actually quite nice when she wants it to be). On album-opener “103,” its squeakiness begs you to skip ahead; on album-closer, “Mountain,” it demands you to hit the disc changer. Certainly not the best way to bookend an album. The record doesn’t really begin to spin โ€˜til “Erase the Lines,” the sixth track, which harks back to the Kerosene Hat days of Cracker. W2000 hit the bulls-eye on raucous “Lock and Key,” equal parts simple, cohesive and catchy rock. But with only a handful of listenable tracks here, it doesn’t take ESP to think EP not LP.