CD Review: The Raveonettes - Pretty In Black
Published June 17, 2006
The Raveonettes are a Retro Country Rock’n’Roll duo from Denmark who specialise in slow ballads. They harp back to the 1950s at a time when slow urban Rock’n’Roll was often indiscernible from its Country cousin. The sound is simple, enjoyable and confident, however for me the vocals had a tendency to grate when they weren’t being bland, and the lyrics were rarely anything much. Sometimes there’s a modern(ish) edge, when a 1990s Indie influence creeps in, but this is not frequent.
The album opens with The Heavens, a plodding fireside ballad to a lost love or missing horse or something like that. It’s dripping in Country and, indeed, Western and there are frequent returns to the genre, particularly in the wistful Uncertain Times and Somewhere in Texas which is pure undistilled Country, not to be taken neat.
Love in a Trashcan is clearly the single as it was stickered all over the front of the album. This is an upbeat garage tune, which is pleasant if uninspired. Sleepwalking actually has some atmosphere, and could almost be Transvision Vamp returning from the grave, albeit toned down. And Here Comes Mary is like Buddy Holly backed by The Jesus and Mary Chain, although that makes it sound better than it is.
The mainstay of the album is the ballad, such as the typical If I was Young and irritating Seductress of Bums. Ode to LA sounds like cheesy Christmas Motown and My Boyfriend’s Back is a pop cover that will make you want to kill their manager.
The Raveonettes, like a lot of bands, take the whole retro thing too far, and rather than making it their own thing, they tend to be very faithful and thus uninspired. A nice afternoon pub band, but was a record contract really necessary?
Rating (/5): One Limp Danish Waffle.
- CD Review: The Raveonettes - Pretty In Black
- Published: June 17, 2006
- Type: Review
- Section: Music
- Filed Under: Music: Country and Americana, Music: Pop
- Writer: Mr Peter More
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Comments
One further thought, incidentally: you seem to have missed Here Comes Mary's rather obvious and knowing reference to The Everly Brothers' All I Have To Do Is Dream :-)





I'd never say that The Raveonettes specialise in "slow ballads".
Even a cursory glance at their back catalogue would reveal far more upbeat efforts; "Chain Gang Of Love", the previous album, was a 33-minute feedback-drenched pop frenzy that blended sugar-coated pop with rhythms derived as much from Suicide as the Motown and 50s rock'n'roll that they love so much.
And sure, "Pretty In Black" is the weakest of their records so far, but there are some really great moments - the (intentionally, I think) hilarious cover of My Boyfriend's Back being one of them. It's not at all as downbeat as you suggest, although I'd concede it takes a few songs to get going.
Sune Rose Wagner has stated in interviews that he sees part of his job as being to bring the music he loves to a more contemporary audience - hence, presumably, why he has managed to earn the respect, and, importantly, the participation of such luminaries as Mo Tucker and Ronnie Spector.
To my ears, they've picked up the mantle of the classic blend of bubblegum pop and the Velvets influence that the Jesus and Mary Chain allowed to slip from their shoulders so ignominiously nearly ten years ago.
Even better, they don't take themselves at all seriously - The Raveonettes don't do moody posturing. And I suspect they see nothing wrong with being lightweight. Who would, when you can have as much fun being lightweight as they obviously do?
If you disagree strongly enough, I'd urge you to catch them live in concert. I challenge you not to spend the whole gig grinning from ear to ear.