The Greenberry Woods' instrumentation and yearning vocal style tend to the emotionally manipulative, heart-on-sleeve side, but lyrics often rise above the vacuous boy-girl stuff that defines the genre. "Love Songs" surveys the cliched landscape with a sly, knowing eye while working completely within the musical formula. At 18 tracks, most hovering under the three-minute mark, Big Money Item serves up a dizzying over-abundance of sugary riches. While some selections remain lightweight trifles, enough substantial moments overflow the cone to coat the listener in captivating sticky goo. "Invisible Threads" combines sudden gear shifts with a phased, baroque pop underpinning. There's the stately soft-psych of "Parachute," and a dew-eyed tip of the hat to Crowded House balladry in "For You." "Nervous" pumps up the fuzz for some garage-y power-pop while "Go Without You" breaks into Bay City Roller handclaps. "Oh Janine"'s soaring chorus recalls both The Beach Boys and Eric Carmen's Raspberries. Even at its most superficial and derivative and unapologetically nerdy, Big Money Item is just so chock full of fatal hooks that...well...life almost starts to feel that fresh and innocent again. ~ Roch Parisien, All Music Guide
With an updating of the pop sounds championed by the Beatles and the Byrds, Greenberry Woods add their own personality to the mix and come up with Rapple Dapple. All fans of pop music will find something to fall in love with here. "Trampoline" and "Sentimental Role" are very Beatleish, while "#37 (Feels So Strange)" is right out the glory days of the Byrds, but by all means, check out the rest of the tracks, because each one has a charm all its own. A fine debut disc of pure pop. ~ James Chrispell, All Music Guide