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Shonen Knife

Super Group

  • AMG Review of Super Group

    Amg
    Mark Deming
    All Music Guide

    Just how long can someone in ock & roll go on being naďve? Naoko Yamano has been the guitarist, lead vocalist, and principle songwriter with Shonen Knife since 1981, and more than 25 years after recording the band's debut album, she's still writing the same kind of songs she did when she was 21, reveling in the joys of food, feeding animals at the park, playing music, and various goofy sci-fi scenarios. Shonen Knife sound like they've learned more than a few tricks over the years on 2009's Super Group -- Yamano's guitar work is much more confident and technically precise than it was back in the day, and the rhythm section of Ritsuko Taneda on bass and Etsuko Nakanishi on drums (who respectively joined the group in 2006 and 2005) is simple but right on the money. Put the three together and Shonen Knife sound like a sweetly enthusiastic pop-punk combo, not unlike the Ramones as interpreted by a bunch of hipper-than-average Girl Scouts, which is just what the world has come to expect of this band. But it seems curious that Yamano doesn't sing with much more expertise than she does after fronting a band for so long, and while only a fool would expect her to suddenly write lyrics like Leonard Cohen, the style that seemed charmingly childlike in the early '80s appears curiously willful and a bit stunted as Yamano's fiftieth birthday looms on the horizon. On the surface, Super Group sounds just as good (though not notably better) than the albums that won Shonen Knife a cult following back in the '80s. But the energy and goofball charm that were so much a part of what made them memorable aren't what they used to be, and what once was heartfelt now plays like the work of a writer following a format instead of a gal sharing her candy-colored dreams to the world.

Shonen Knife: 'Super Group' Gets US Release in August!
4 months ago

Shonen Knife are a Japanese female pop-punk trio that formed in Osaka in the early 80s, and steadily acquired a cult following through their unique blend of 60s girl group and pop sounds with Ramones-esque D.I.Y. punk- a tribute album Every Band Has a Shonen Knife Who Loves Them, released in 1989, even included Redd Kross and Sonic Youth amongst cover artists, and Shonen Knife opened for Nirvan...

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4 months ago

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MP3s: Shonen Knife - Super Group
3 months ago

Video: "Shonen Knife - Super Group" MP3: Shonen Knife - "Super Group" from Super Group, out August 25 on Good Charamel. Shonen Knife makes it impossible not to love them. Cynics might suggest that their broken English is a cutesy...

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Shonen Knife : Super Group
2 months ago

If you're going to listen to girl-group garage-rock, might as well listen to Shonen Knife.

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