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    Louis XIV

    Slick Dogs and Ponies

    Louis XIV - Slick Dogs and Ponies

    01/29/2008 | Atlantic / Wea 

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    All Music Guide Review

    Louis XIV's first album was a sleazy, breezy dose of AC/DC-inspired rawk & roll that put over its swagger with a cheesy wink and a playfully sexy bump and grind. It was the kind of record Brian Johnston might put on when he's sitting down at home to relax; totally silly and a lot of fun. Their second album Slick Dogs and Ponies is a decidedly darker effort with a greasy strand of evil congealing right below the surface. The sound of the album is much fuller and less punchy, songs are weighted down by gloomy strings, vocals are framed by vocal choirs, and the raunchy guitars that propelled the first album are pushed to the background. It's a more mature and substantial sound, but the record isn't quite as bouncey and goofy as Best Little Secrets Are Kept. The lyrics are less fun, too. The songs tell tales of modern life gone wrong, derailed by sordid sex, drug use, and all sorts of unpleasantness. "Stalker" is grimy and might leave you wanting a shower, or at least a quick spin of a Donovan record, to make you feel clean again. "Hopesick" is a the kind of weary, beaten ballad you'd expect from an arena rock band on their seventh album; it sounds tattered and desperate, like they can barely even function as a band. The moments of rocked-out swagger are still here, but are ultimately drowned out by a musical and lyrical heaviness that turns the album into a downer. Of course, there's no reason a band can't make a depressing and bleak album if they want to. ~ Tim Sendra, All Music Guide

    Slick Dogs and Ponies Track Listing

    Slick Dogs and Ponies Notes

    Most artists are content to stick with the formula they’re known for, changing as much (or as little) as they think they can get away with—but Louis XIV are not most artists. In fact, on their new album Slick Dogs and Ponies, the San Diegobased quartet have headed into new sonic terrain, fearlessly overcoming the obstacles they experienced in creating this collection of songs. It’s a bigger, bolder, more ambitious record that conjoins seduction and coercion as much as it is an invitation to a world of sonic abandon where angelic choirs, celestial strings and even swarming bees join the band’s thrilling, new millennium take on classic rock.

    Credits of Slick Dogs and Ponies

    • Jason Staehler Hill
    • Organ, Guitar (Electric), Producer, Arp, Mixing, Group Member, Inlay Photography, String Arrangements, Engineer, Vocals, Piano, Guitar (Acoustic), Bass
    • Mister Brian Joseph Karscig
    • Organ, Piano, Guitar (Electric), Choir, Chorus, Arp, Group Member, String Arrangements, Producer, Vocals, Glockenspiel, Guitar (Acoustic), Bass

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