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Time to Go Home

Time to Go Home in Franklin, TN

Current price: $13.99
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Time to Go Home

Barnes and Noble

Time to Go Home in Franklin, TN

Current price: $13.99
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Size: CD

Plenty of bands defy easy categorization, but very few offer the puzzling approach to low-key punk rock as Seattle's
Chastity Belt
. Humor and sarcasm were big parts of the band's 2013 debut
No Regerts
. The intentionally misspelled title, sophomoric ally comedic lyrics, and goofy songs about sex and partying all pointed to a rambunctious and juvenile punk sound, but these immature sentiments were juxtaposed with
's woozy, midtempo musical backdrops. Vulgar lyrics were delivered in a dreggy croon by vocalist/guitarist
Julia Shapiro
, and obnoxious inside jokes were often hidden under gentle sheets of
Sonic Youth
-esque patch works of interwoven guitars. Second album
Time to Go Home
takes the band's unique blend of beauty and absurdity into slightly different places. Still intact is their weird blend of ridiculous lyrical passages and serious, even somewhat reserved playing. Standout tune "Joke" buries lyrics about wanting to start fires beneath sublime interlocking guitar patterns and a driving, extended jam that builds as the song goes on. "Cool Slut" is similar, delivering lyrics about sex-positive attitudes in a tune so smooth and beguiling it's hard to know if the song and its characters are intended as parody or not. Separating the silly from the sincere is harder on
because the
have grown since their debut, evidenced in more emotionally open moments amid the songs about drunken adventures and tongue-in-cheek ennui. The lazy drift of "On the Floor" hints at genuine feelings of post-college displacement and album-opener "Drone" reappropriates a line from author Sheila Heti's novel How Should a Person Be for the chorus. "He was just another man trying to teach me something" imbues the song with a directly feminist push that was sometimes just hinted at with a smirk on the first record. The band's melding of flip humor and beautifully crafted dream punk is an odd one, but works better on the more intricate arrangements of
than it did on the sometimes silly
. Depending on what aspect of the band the listener pays the most attention to,
can be either brazenly hilarious or mysterious and moving. ~ Fred Thomas
Plenty of bands defy easy categorization, but very few offer the puzzling approach to low-key punk rock as Seattle's
Chastity Belt
. Humor and sarcasm were big parts of the band's 2013 debut
No Regerts
. The intentionally misspelled title, sophomoric ally comedic lyrics, and goofy songs about sex and partying all pointed to a rambunctious and juvenile punk sound, but these immature sentiments were juxtaposed with
's woozy, midtempo musical backdrops. Vulgar lyrics were delivered in a dreggy croon by vocalist/guitarist
Julia Shapiro
, and obnoxious inside jokes were often hidden under gentle sheets of
Sonic Youth
-esque patch works of interwoven guitars. Second album
Time to Go Home
takes the band's unique blend of beauty and absurdity into slightly different places. Still intact is their weird blend of ridiculous lyrical passages and serious, even somewhat reserved playing. Standout tune "Joke" buries lyrics about wanting to start fires beneath sublime interlocking guitar patterns and a driving, extended jam that builds as the song goes on. "Cool Slut" is similar, delivering lyrics about sex-positive attitudes in a tune so smooth and beguiling it's hard to know if the song and its characters are intended as parody or not. Separating the silly from the sincere is harder on
because the
have grown since their debut, evidenced in more emotionally open moments amid the songs about drunken adventures and tongue-in-cheek ennui. The lazy drift of "On the Floor" hints at genuine feelings of post-college displacement and album-opener "Drone" reappropriates a line from author Sheila Heti's novel How Should a Person Be for the chorus. "He was just another man trying to teach me something" imbues the song with a directly feminist push that was sometimes just hinted at with a smirk on the first record. The band's melding of flip humor and beautifully crafted dream punk is an odd one, but works better on the more intricate arrangements of
than it did on the sometimes silly
. Depending on what aspect of the band the listener pays the most attention to,
can be either brazenly hilarious or mysterious and moving. ~ Fred Thomas

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1800 Galleria Blvd #1310, Franklin, TN 37067, United States

Find Barnes and Noble at CoolSprings Galleria in Franklin, TN

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