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- Summary: The debut full-length release from British punk duo Lambrini Girls was recorded with Gilla Band's Daniel Fox and mixed by Seth Manchester.
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- Record Label: City Slang
- Genre(s): Pop/Rock
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Score distribution:
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Positive: 14 out of 16
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Mixed: 2 out of 16
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Negative: 0 out of 16
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Jan 8, 2025This record is loud, raw, and impossible to ignore.
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Jan 8, 2025Though lyrics are undoubtedly Lambrini Girls’ prime weapon of choice, with Phoebe also spitting home truths about police corruption (‘Bad Apple’), workplace misogyny (‘Company Culture’), industry inequality (‘Filthy Rich Nepo Baby’) and more, the record’s instrumentals nevertheless hold the weight of her words with ease; cleaner, more ambitious, and more diverse than the arrangements on 2023 EP ‘You’re Welcome’, they cement the duo as natural successors to modern punk rock greats like Green Day, SOFT PLAY and Amyl and The Sniffers.
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Jan 6, 2025There are memorable lines galore if you can keep up with Lunny's runaway train delivery.
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MojoJan 6, 2025Nu-riot grrrls who may well be doing it better than anyone since Bikini Kill. [Feb 2025, p.91]
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Jan 10, 2025Lambrini Girls’ music is not for everyone, but nor is it meant to be, and, taken as a statement of intent from one of Britain’s most hyped new bands, it’s a pretty ballsy one. Big d--k energy, indeed.
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Jan 15, 2025Recorded with Gilla Band bassist Daniel Fox, Who Let the Dogs Out wisely leans on nosier elements when the subject matter gets earnest.
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Jan 16, 2025If I’d stuck to just a listen or two of Bad Apple or No Homo, I’d be tempted to think this was a good album. But underneath the fight-montage attack, the songwriting feels about as lazy as it can possibly get. I’m not looking for math-rock bridges or string sections in my garage band or anything, but there’s a difference between walking down a well-trod path and wallowing.