Resident Genius displays a mishmash of female vocals from
Akiko Carver and instrumentation from former
Peechees member Ropstyle to form a 14-song album of garage-fueled punk electronica. Some of the songs have great grooves and are played with competence and creativity. "The Birds of Weather," for example, features some nice DJ work and trip-hop combined with a flute solo that leads the listener down the path like a siren calling her beloved. Or, to put it another way, envision the mythical Pan delving deep into a forest with this as his soundtrack. On the next track, "Dramatics," one can forget all about Pan, because he just got ripped into a million pieces, flesh torn from his limbs as wild animals bit into him. It is a gutsy piece with full-on guitar and yelling vocals. Quite the contrast, but so it goes on
Resident Genius. Much of the material here is decent and creative. However, at the same time, occasionally the album drags a bit too long and at points is downright silly. Certain women shouldn't do yelling, screaming vocals (just as certain men shouldn't, too), which just sound ridiculous in relation to the music they create. The song "Slushee Machine" portrays this adequately. And with lines like "I prefer the slushee machine" and "Take me to your slushee machine/Put me in your slushee machine," these types of tracks on the album are worth skipping over. The concept behind the album is respectable, however. According to the band, the point of
Resident Genius is to stand testament to the fact that labels are imposed and unnatural, and that reality is imagined. Creative and insightful! With that combination, fans of electronic garage punk can surely look past a few silly lyrics about slushee machines and recognize some talent and vision when it comes along on an album like
Resident Genius. ~ Kurt Morris