Vivian Girls | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Vivian Girls |
Cover: | VGALBUM.jpg |
Recorded: | January 2008 |
Studio: | Civil Defense League (Brooklyn, New York) |
Label: | Mauled by Tigers |
Next Title: | Everything Goes Wrong |
Next Year: | 2009 |
Vivian Girls is the debut studio album by American indie rock band Vivian Girls. It was released in May 2008 by the label Mauled by Tigers.[1]
After Mauled by Tigers' limited pressing of 500 LP copies quickly sold out, Vivian Girls was reissued on CD and LP by In the Red Records on October 7, 2008.[2] It was reissued again by Polyvinyl Record Co. in 2019, alongside its 2009 follow-up Everything Goes Wrong.[3]
Vivian Girls has been described by critics as an album of lo-fi[4] [5] and noise pop[5] music. Pastes Henry Freedland said that it exhibits Vivian Girls' fusion of art punk and shoegaze-pop, while NME noted the presence of garage rock elements.
Vivian Girls was met with favorable reviews from music critics. The album holds a score of 80 out of 100 on the review aggregation website Metacritic, based on 15 reviews. NME stated that "between the omnipresent slabs of reverb, the trio flip between harmonic garage rock, gloomy melodies and twee-Birthday Partyisms". Jesse Darlin' of Plan B praised the songs' melodies as "all hard and spiky on the outside and gooey on the inside, like tough girl music should be."[6]
At the end of 2008, Vivian Girls was named the ninth best album of the year by Rough Trade,[7] while Pitchfork listed it as the year's 16th best album.[8]
Despite being polarizingly received when it was released, Vivian Girls has since grown in status. In a 10th-anniversary retrospective, Stereogums Patrick D. McDermott dubbed it "an all-killer-no-filler introduction to an awesome band". McDermott wrote of audiences' desire to hear "something catchy but not polished, raw but not mean" in music beyond the "pastoral-sounding boy bands and Coachella-band psych" common at the time. He felt that this was briefly provided by noise pop's late-2000s resurgence, of which the album contained "22 of [its] messiest and most influential minutes".[5]
Credits are adapted from the album's liner notes.[9]
Vivian Girls
Additional personnel