In Brazilian Girls brief career, theyve always been a bit schizophrenic when it comes to genres. But for album number three, New York City, the trio have finally taken it a bit too far. Throughout the discs 11 tracks, youre thrown around like a rag doll, repeatedly trying to find your bearings amongst everything from new wave revivals and rocked-out club anthems to lounge-y jazz and carnival jams. Yes, its all good for Brazilian Girls to push their artistic boundaries something theyve always done but as a listener, it can be a bit trying, at times. Also, the groups attempts to show off their multicultural world-savviness feel more contrived than ever on New York City. Prime example: "Internacional, where the bands multilingual vocalist Sabina Sciubba rattles off a ridiculously long list of foreign locations for no apparent reason at all. Besides the odd half-decent track, like "St. Petersburg and "Good Time, Brazilian Girls are increasingly becoming what you always feared: a novelty act.
(Verve)Brazilian Girls
New York City
BY Brock ThiessenPublished Sep 28, 2008