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Gwendoline’s music doesn't give a fuck. Doesn't make proper plans, as they keep telling
anyone who’ll listen. Everyone will hear what they want on "C'est à moi, ça", new album
by two Brest-based boys on Born Bad. Some would have them be Joy Division or les
Béruriers Noirs. Some would brand them cold-wave, dark-wave, chav-wave, you name it.
We won’t.
You can’t sing that much about pub culture without paying your dues. Their first album was
literally written on the counter. They have every right to shit on gyropod-riding suits when
they’ve stolen their favorite bars. Just listen to "Le sang de papa et maman" to check from
which well they draw the muddy liquor that gushes from this record. Though they won’t
brag about it, they are definitely ripping new assholes to every social injustice warrior out
there, with gusto.
Some songs can be sung, because they manage enough room for us in there. You can
join on the chorus as one would for a soccer song, but they’re not going for stadiums.
Pierre Barrett and Mickaël Olivette, two magnificent losers for whom « the end of the
world began when they were born », just tell it like it is. They « don't give a damn about
writing like Beaudelaire ». Their lyrics taste like damp coasters and smell like retired
microphones living in the bottom drawer. Every track is an opportunity to spit on everyaspect of life that asked for it : vacation clubs, the generation before, the one after, low-
cost living, trash TV. And themselves, no doubt, because they've got more important thingsto do than draw up socially responsible plans.
French duo doesn’t get it when, after years of loose ends, the it crowd wants to take selfies
with them. And it's not going to get any better with this new album, conceived and
recorded at home, in Brittany. The dark, radical, no-nonsense instrumentals (Jake and
Romain, guitar/keyboards) give Pierre and Micka a strong ladder to go piss on the parade
from a great height.
Love them, and it probably already pisses them off. Their anger feels single-breasted and
fair. We can’t afford nuance when everything tastes like butter gone bad.quelle: tixforgigs.com