Friends | Manifest!

Fat Possum
By LIZ PELLY  |  July 3, 2012
4.0 4.0 Stars

manifest-main

With their debut full-length, Brooklyn pop quintet Friends have released the best pop album of the summer. After emerging from Bushwick warehouses just over a year ago, the group gained international popularity for two ultra-catchy singles, "I'm His Girl" and "Friend Crush." Both are highlights of Manifest!, plus 10 equally excellent tracks informed by the sounds of New York's underground past: '80s disco, R&B, hip-hop, and punk influences all surface. Each song could stand on its own as a single: the moody melodies and punchy tropical percussion of "Sorry," the funky slowed-down "A Thing like This," the synth beat of "A Light." Manifest! is marked throughout by the lyrics of defiant, relatable front-grrrl, Samantha Urbani, who sings about everything from open relationships to street harassment. The latter is tackled on "Van Fan Gor Du," where Urbani's crew has her back with call-and-response vocals. "Hey, my name is Sam," she yells. "It's not shorty, or sexy, or baby, or mami, you ain't ever gonna understand." "Mind Control" is another stand-out: "I don't need your beauty standard/I can be my own dude," Urbani sings. "I won't pay tuition, I can be my own school/I don't need prescriptions, I can change my own mood." Radical.

  Topics: CD Reviews , Music, Brooklyn, Arts,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY LIZ PELLY
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   ICEAGE | YOU'RE NOTHING  |  February 11, 2013
    There's something intriguing about the ways Copenhagen punk band Iceage seem simultaneously to care so much and so little.
  •   BEE-HAVIOR: ''FESTOONING THE INFLATABLE BEEHIVE'' AT BU'S 808 GALLERY  |  February 06, 2013
    An art gallery may seem like an unconventional space for discussions on insect behavior, but Maria Molteni maintains beekeeping is as much an art as a science.
  •   LA BIG VIC | COLD WAR  |  February 01, 2013
    In 2011, La Big Vic released Actually, a retro-futuristic avant-pop album playing skillfully with classical and experimental influences.
  •   KATIE CRUTCHFIELD'S TRAVELS  |  January 30, 2013
    Waxahatchee's American Weekend was my favorite record of 2012, an 11-song collection of downcast acoustic-guitar ballads laced with raw, pointed poetry, home-recorded over a week at Katie Crutchfield's childhood home in Birmingham, Alabama.
  •   THE HISTORY OF APPLE PIE | OUT OF VIEW  |  January 29, 2013
    London-based quintet the History of Apple Pie's debut LP for Marshall Teller Records is an essential spin for fans of Dino Jr. riffs and early Slumberland indie-pop.

 See all articles by: LIZ PELLY