Palberta - Palberta5000
Pitchfork 68
Read Peyton Thomas’ review of the album.
Tue Jan 26 06:00:00 GMT 2021The Guardian 0
(Wharf Cat)
The wonderfully scrappy New York indie trio are broadening their style but don’t quite have the songs to match
Palberta are frustrating. At their best, the New York trio dig up the bones of punk-funk and post-punk, bolt them together and run a power line through for a giggle. Just as often, they sound like the scrag-end of dated hipster indie. Their new album edges Lily, Ani and Nina closer toward professionalism, with perkier production than they’re used to, although they don’t quite have the strength of songwriting to leave the scuzz completely behind.
This brings the familiar problems for any basement band seeking to stride up the stairs and widen their appeal. The scrappy underdog bite of, say, their quarter-arsed, one-minute cover of the Bee Gees’ unimprovable Stayin’ Alive is swapped for a swathe of toothless tunes neither cool nor commercial enough to satisfy hardcore fans or find an entirely new audience.
Continue reading... Sun Jan 24 15:00:02 GMT 2021