Barnes & Noble
Perhaps the most un-Texan band to have ever emerged from the Lone Star State, this quintet proffers a breathy brand of art-pop that rivals the Cocteau Twins in its ability to create an atmosphere that's nearly pure ether. The group's first full-length -- following a pair of short, sharp EP releases -- has an engagingly hypnotic way about it, but folks who're watching their sugar intake might want to consume it in limited doses. Sisters Chauntelle and Sherri DuPree, who share singing and lyric-writing duties, revel in life's small mysteries (in the Alice in Wonderlandlike "Marvelous Things," those include grazing horses and all manner of flying wildlife) and surround themselves with the sort of instrumental backing that befits such musings. The lush, dreamy sound reveals nary a jagged edge -- other than the Radiohead-like guitar line that propels "Telescope Eyes" -- which allows the songs to blend together as sort of a sensory-overloading soundscape. That's not to say Room Noises is uneventful, just that the "events" that transpire in its grooves take some time to hit home -- but that time is most assuredly well spent. David Sprague
All Music Guide
Eisley make some of the downright prettiest, and strangest, pop of the 2000s. The band's Laughing City and Marvelous Things EPs, which put the DuPree sisters' delicate voices in songs that sounded like dream journal entries set to music, had a remarkable sense of wonder. Not much has changed on Eisley's debut album, Room Noises, but their sound and feel are so unique that change wasn't really necessary. Their darkly whimsical music has ties to the sweetly strange work of '90s groups like the Sundays, Sixpence None the Richer, and (especially) Belly, but there simply aren't many bands that sound like Eisley around in the 2000s. Room Noises finds their sound in full flower, mixing a handful of songs from their EPs with new material that reflects the band's growth. Older tracks like "Telescope Eyes," "I Wasn't Prepared," and "Marvelous Things" are quintessential Eisley, showing the group's knack for pairing gorgeous harmonies with sentiments like "I glimpsed a bat with butterfly wings." Room Noises' newer songs are nearly as fanciful, but more varied: "Memories"'s swirling, swelling arrangement makes it one of Eisley's biggest, most ambitious-sounding songs yet, while the largely acoustic "Just Like We Do" and the more rock-based "My Lovely" abandon the band's usually lush sound for something more restrained, but still gossamer enough to be recognizably Eisley. And though they do bittersweet better than just about anybody -- especially on the brooding, shanty-esque "Lost at Sea" -- Room Noises features some of the band's happiest-sounding songs. The gorgeous, country-tinged "Golly Sandra" is equally charming and unexpected, and the DuPree sisters' pure, light voices sound like they were made to sing lyrics like "Brightly Wound"'s "I hold sunlight and swallow fireflies." And though several of the album's songs deal with relationships in relatively straightforward terms, songs like the gently playful closer "Trolley Wood" and self-explanatory "One Day I Slowly Floated Away" hint that the band's whimsy hasn't departed entirely. Good thing, too: the tug-of-war between fairy tales and real life is what makes Eisley, and Room Noises, so enjoyable. Heather Phares