Six boys and girls from LA are not expected to conduct themselves quite this well this consistently, or stay so cute while they do it, but they do. Vocally girlie (in all the really great ways), elements of Dee-lite as well as
the Breeders come to mind while both genders concentrate on durable banjo lines, spuzz-nutty guitar, and serpentine synth figures throughout
Songs for Peeps. A pool-party headliner, Sissybar has matured from their pop-heavy indie-pop Statutory Grape in 1996 into a far sturdier, satisfyingly post-adolescent contempo outfit. Another Tom Grimley production (a la Beck,
the Rentals,
Geraldine Fibbers), there are some dotty fresh touches lurking beneath, and throughout the white-sugar pop package here. "Yardboat" is essentially a ballad recognizing the hazards of sailing on California desert sands, while "Alien Eyes" is straight from midnight UFO-sighting radio culture. The best and weirdest cut is no doubt "Daisy Putter," sounding for all its worth like a Mother Goose rhyme sung by
Lou Reed with
the New Christy Minstrels as backup. Wow, whose idea was that?
Songs for Peeps is a half bubble off plumb for those of us who dig our pop with a grin on. Strictly Los Angeles on a global scale. ~ Becky Byrkit