Rock critic
Robert Christgau calls
Clem Snide's music "true American deadpan," and group leader
Eef Barzelay says he believes their obscure first album "did in fact seep into the collective unconscious and caused millions of people worldwide to feel a vague sense of resignation." Such comments notwithstanding, it would be a mistake to dismiss
Your Favorite Music as some sort of put-on. Like the albums of, say,
Jonathan Richman, this music has a homespun quality and a twisted worldview that can bring a smile. But there's serious and rather wonderful stuff going on here, too.
A lot of this is not quite like anything else out there, though if you need a reference point, think of the softer side of
Velvet Underground -- or at least
Pearls Before Swine -- with touches of
the Fleetwoods and
the Left Banke. On this latest release, Barzelay is a seductive vocalist, and cellist/violinist
Jason Glasser shines throughout. The original compositions are almost uniformly terrific, moreover, though the album's greatest achievement may be its reverent cover of
Ritchie Valens' "Donna."
Clem Snide takes the song at an even slower pace than Valens did, adds moody strings, and turns it into a near-perfect four-minute meditation on lost love.
–
Jeff Burger, Rovi