I have to say that when I listened to Mother Mother's newest album the first few times I wasn’t nearly as impressed as when I first heard their previous albums, but I misjudged the album.
These newer songs where so lyrically strong, as with all their other songs, mixed with a dance beat…as with all their other songs..but these were the type that grow on you.
No matter how hard I try it’s been impossible to get the song, Problems, out of my head. Getaway, and Oleander have haunting melodies, much like Ghosting from the second album; strong yet delicate vocals from Molly Guldemond and Jasmine Parkin make these songs a smart pull away from just the regular ol’ dance melodies. I'm not positive if Ryan Guldemond, the lead vocalist, was responsible for writing the songs (as he had for the previous albums), but you can definitely hear their sound evolving. Many bands try to change their sound, whether subtlely or drastically, by their 3rd album (as far as I've noticed)...But Mother Mother has taken their unique, dance-style of music and made it stronger while keeping it their own; most definitely matured, from the short-song style of their Touch Up album.
These newer songs where so lyrically strong, as with all their other songs, mixed with a dance beat…as with all their other songs..but these were the type that grow on you.
No matter how hard I try it’s been impossible to get the song, Problems, out of my head. Getaway, and Oleander have haunting melodies, much like Ghosting from the second album; strong yet delicate vocals from Molly Guldemond and Jasmine Parkin make these songs a smart pull away from just the regular ol’ dance melodies. I'm not positive if Ryan Guldemond, the lead vocalist, was responsible for writing the songs (as he had for the previous albums), but you can definitely hear their sound evolving. Many bands try to change their sound, whether subtlely or drastically, by their 3rd album (as far as I've noticed)...But Mother Mother has taken their unique, dance-style of music and made it stronger while keeping it their own; most definitely matured, from the short-song style of their Touch Up album.
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