Lemuria

Get Better - Lemuria

Release Date: 1/01/2008

Recording Date: 2/2008

Tracks: 12

Length: 00:28:35 Hrs

Label: Asian Man

Type: CD,LP

Genre/Styles

Album Tracks (12)

Song Title
Length
Lyrics
1.
Search web for matches
02:40
3.
No matches found
02:56
4.
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03:02
5.
No matches found
01:58
6.
No matches found
02:39
7.
No matches found
Dog
02:01
8.
No matches found
01:19
9.
Search web for matches
01:44
11.
No matches found
01:43
12.
No matches found
02:44
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What the Critics Say

After a few years' worth of EPs and singles (ably gathered on the decks-clearing The First Collection in 2007), Lemuria finally make their full-length bow with the self-assured and often marvelous Get Better. A poppy indie rock trio from Buffalo, NY with vocals split about 70/30 between guitarist Sheena Ozzella and drummer Alexander Kerns (the songwriting, interestingly, is in the same proportion, but flipped), Lemuria are in some ways a stylistic throwback to the glory days of '90s indie rock. Comparisons to Superchunk, Beat Happening (Kerns has kind of a Calvin Johnson thing going in his deep, affectless vocal style), and Juliana Hatfield's original group the Blake Babies are immediately apparent in Get Better's blend of smart, real-life lyrics ("You use your lipstick as an excuse not to kiss me"), subtly deployed pop hooks, and layered distortion. Drop-dead cool without the ostentatious nihilism that weakens so many similar records, Get Better is the exact opposite of the tortured self-absorption of emo. For example, "Wardrobe" is perhaps the first indie rock song about that bastion of the subculture, the thrift store, and it's almost certainly the first one to ponder the connections between the people who donated the goods and those who plunder them to create their own style, creating a persona "like a thrifty book whose previous owner highlighted the parts they liked the most." Again and again, that concept of community, or of a spark of shared connection between two people, reverberates through Get Better. Optimistic and positive without being "posi," to use one of the more irritating emo buzzwords, Get Better strikes a subtle but important sense between band and listener that perhaps we are indeed all in this together. That it's also a great, catchy album filled with memorable, tuneful pop songs at times almost seems like lagniappe. ~ Stewart Mason, All Music Guide

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