Music: Ex Hex; Vince Staples; Indina Menzel
Ex Hex’s first full album, Rips, has the qualities we associate with a “summer album”: it’s full of fun and life. But don’t we also need those things as the weather turns, too?
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Rips
Merge
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Ex Hex’s first full album, Rips, has the qualities we associate with a “summer album”: it’s full of fun and life. But don’t we also need those things as the weather turns, too?
Rips is pure pop-punk; guitars are strummed and shredded with easy regularity, and Mary Timony’s vocals sound at turns like Siouxsie Sioux and Joan Jett. The album is distinguished by a feeling of comfort in its own skin – despite its tonguein- cheek angst. Timony has been a figure in the Washington, DC, punk scene for two decades. The ease of her sound took a long time to perfect – Rips is its culmination.
The album opens strong, with the catchy Don’t Wanna Lose, about the illusion of choice in a broken relationship: “You keep telling me it won’t be long/Well that’s not right and that’s not wrong.” Each song takes a nuanced approach to complicated modern relationships, but the album always maintain a sense of humour.
The energy of the album never flags, and wisely Ex Hex limit themselves to a trim 35 minutes. Highlights include Waste Your Time, Waterfall, and the wonderful Hot and Cold.
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Hell Can Wait
Def Jam
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