Track Listing 1. Untouched 2. Hook Me Up 3. This Is How It Feels 4. This Love 5. I Can't Stay Away 6. Take Me on the Floor 7. I Don't Wanna Wait 8. Popular 9. Revenge Is Sweeter (Than You Ever Were) 10. Someone Wake Me Up 11. All I Have 12. In Another Life 13. Goodbye to You
| Details | | Distributor: | WEA (Distributor) | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes On their second full-length album, 2008's HOOK ME UP, Australian twin sisters Jessica and Lisa Origliasso (aka the Veronicas) present an energetic set of techno-rock. Standout tracks on this keyboard-driven affair, which often recalls the synth-pop sound of the Russian act T.A.T.U., include the hedonistic title tune and the pulsing, industrial-tinged number "This Is How It Feels." Based on the vampy, electro-pop title track and its accompanying video -- which features the Origliasso twins dressed in school uniforms (a teen pop tradition dating back at least to Britney Spears' debut almost a decade earlier), clutching each other in the corridors of a drab, Orwellian academy -- it would seem that the Veronicas decided to take a page from the t.A.T.u. playbook for their follow-up to The Secret Life of the Veronicas. That would be only fitting, considering that the sisters helped compose one of t.A.T.u.'s biggest hits, "All About Us," and it's somewhat accurate insofar as Hook Me Up is a far more electronic, dance-based record than their sterling pop/rock debut. There's also the shoutily awkward "I wanna kiss a girl/I wanna kiss a boy" bridge of "Take Me on the Floor," and a decidedly histrionic tone to most of the material (the album's working title was "Overdramatic," which would been entirely appropriate), although that's not exactly a new development for them. But whereas t.A.T.u. are an unabashedly manufactured outfit whose appeal is essentially intertwined with their (or their handlers') knack for image and media manipulation, the Veronicas -- who seem to be in control of their own career to an impressive extent for a pair of 22-year-old girls -- are the rare teen pop act for whom visual presentation is almost entirely incidental. (Note, for instance, that they haven't appeared on either of their album covers -- which is practically unheard of in teen pop -- and they're 22-year-old identical twin sisters.) Their first album revealed Lisa and Jess Origliasso to be exceptionally competent songwriters and striking, if not necessarily nuanced, singers, and despite its generic punk-pop trappings it was one of the most assured teen pop debuts in recent memory, boasting several slices of peerless popcraft including one of the most exciting singles of the 2006, hands down, in "4ever." Simply put, Hook Me Up is an improvement upon its predecessor in almost every regard, consolidating its strengths while making bold and exploratory forward leaps that verge on a wholesale stylistic reinvention. It may not contain one individual moment that quite matches the unrestrained glory of "4ever" (which was after all written by teen pop's undisputed patriarch/genius Max Martin, who is absent from these proceedings though hardly missed), but that song's vocal pyrotechnics and sense of urgency are discernible throughout the album, helping to make it a tighter, leaner listen than the debut despite an equivalent running time. "Untouched" bursts out of the gate with majestic, menacing string stabs and a driving synth-rock pulse beneath its stuttered verses and breathlessly obsessive refrain. "This Is How It Feels" is even more breakneck and impassioned, fueled by anger rather than lust, while "I Can't Stay Away" and "Someone Wake Me Up" echo the anguished Europop melodrama of Secret Life's "Leave Me Alone" and t.A.T.u.'s "All About Us" (not a coincidence: Billy Steinberg had a hand in all four songs.) And the delicious rock-disco "Revenge Is Sweeter (Than You Ever Were)" practically says it all in its title alone. The girls also lighten up occasionally: "Popular" is a brash, half-rapped send-up of celebrity privilege (take away line: "my name is my credit card") that exposes the twins' Aussie accents to excellent effect, and "This Love" (one of only two songs not credited to the Origliassos) is an utterly charming dance-rock confection that, in its last minute, abruptly unleashes a euphoric synthesizer countermelody whose nod to a-ha's "Take ...
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