When a band manages to sell out concerts before even releasing a full-length album, it's hard not to pay attention.
With just a self-titled EP under their belts, London-based newcomers, The Vaccines, are making waves in the vast ocean of the indie music scene.
Their influences might be vintage—ranging from The Zombies, to The Jesus and Mary Chain, to The Ramones—but the hype surrounding them is completely 21st century. Bloggers and music journalists alike have turned to social networking to spread the word on the next great British band.
Although it's easy to lump them in the same category with other lo-fi, dream pop bands—like Beach House, Best Coast, and The Drums—The Vaccines manage to rise above the pack with their catchy hooks and punchy lyrics.
On the surface, “Post Break-Up Sex”--the first track off of the EP –sounds like it could be a lost Buddy Holly B-side, with dulcet 50s pop melodies over a pleasantly jangly beat.
But lyrics like, 'I can't believe you're feeling good from/Post break-up sex/That helps you forget your ex/What did you expect from post break-up sex?' give the song an ironic contrast.
Packing in a lot of punch in less than a minute and a half, “Wreckin' Ball (Ra Ra Ra)” is the stand-out track on the EP.
Even if The Ramones and The Beach Boys formed a supergroup, and then time warped onto the set of a beach party scene in a raging 1960s surf movie, they probably wouldn't come up with a song as catchy as this.
Winding down the EP is the more mellow, psychedelic-influenced “Blow It Up.” With its chiming guitars, downtempo beat, and repetitive chorus of 'Blow/Blow/Blow it up', this song is the auditory equivalent of getting lost in a kaleidoscope, admiring all of the intricate bejewelled patterns.
Until The Vaccines release a full-length album, The Vaccines – EP is the perfect appetizer to keep your music player satiated.