Prettiots - Funs Cool

$21.98

Description

New Vinyl Record - The Prettiots, Funs Cool

Vinyl LP pressing includes digital download. With their debut album, Funs Cool, The Prettiots reveal themselves to be a powerhouse: led by Kay Kasparhauser, a ukulele shredder (?!) who writes some of the sharpest lyrics in the indie pop world right now, with Lulu Prat's bass and vocal harmonies bringing serious rock muscle into the equation. Funs Cool shows that the Prettiots have impressive sonic and thematic range, with songs ranging from sweet to playful to triumphant to dark and near-distrubing: from "Suicide Hotline," which, according to NPR Music, "like many Prettiots songs, couches stunning barbs of insight between sweet, fun harmonies and playful ukulele strums"; the biting breakup song/urban studies essay "Move To LA"; album opener "18 Wheeler," a candid post-mortem on a failed relationship; and a cover of the Misfits' "Skulls," which turns the heavy classic into a pretty and plangent ballad.

  • - Side 1 -
  • 1 Boys (That I Dated in High School)
  • 2 Anyways
  • 3 18 Wheeler
  • 4 Hope Yr Happy
  • 5 Move to la
  • - Side 2 -
  • 1 Dream Boy
  • 2 Siucide Hotline
  • 3 Kiss Me Kninski
  • 4 Skulls
  • 5 Stabler
  • 6 Me and Little Andy
  • 7 10/10 Would Chill Again

SKU: 021401
Joe’s Albums

Prettiots - Funs Cool

$21.98

New Vinyl Record - The Prettiots, Funs Cool

Vinyl LP pressing includes digital download. With their debut album, Funs Cool, The Prettiots reveal themselves to be a powerhouse: led by Kay Kasparhauser, a ukulele shredder (?!) who writes some of the sharpest lyrics in the indie pop world right now, with Lulu Prat's bass and vocal harmonies bringing serious rock muscle into the equation. Funs Cool shows that the Prettiots have impressive sonic and thematic range, with songs ranging from sweet to playful to triumphant to dark and near-distrubing: from "Suicide Hotline," which, according to NPR Music, "like many Prettiots songs, couches stunning barbs of insight between sweet, fun harmonies and playful ukulele strums"; the biting breakup song/urban studies essay "Move To LA"; album opener "18 Wheeler," a candid post-mortem on a failed relationship; and a cover of the Misfits' "Skulls," which turns the heavy classic into a pretty and plangent ballad.

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