Search - Care Bears On Fire :: Get Over It

Get Over It
Care Bears On Fire
Get Over It
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (14) - Disc #1

Power-pop meets punk with these three 13-year old girls from Brooklyn

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Care Bears On Fire
Title: Get Over It
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: S-Curve Records
Original Release Date: 1/1/2009
Re-Release Date: 7/14/2009
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
Style: Hardcore & Punk
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 807315800123

Synopsis

Album Description
Power-pop meets punk with these three 13-year old girls from Brooklyn

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CD Reviews

Great pop-punk, from real-live teenagers!
Joe Sixpack -- Slipcue.com | ...in Middle America | 08/20/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Care Bears On Fire

"Get Over It!"

(S-Curve Records, 2009)

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This is the second self-released album (good luck finding the first!) from this teenage all-gal punk trio from Brooklyn, NY.



Teenage, but just barely: they actually started the band when they were 11 and 12 years old; some members just turned thirteen. The kids are adorable -- any hipster parent would be so proud! -- and music is great. There are at least two classic tracks on here, the perky, anti-conformist "Everybody Else" (which has two video versions floating around online) and the even more stinging "My Problems," in which a junior-high iconoclast stands up for her right to be imperfect -- the lyrics are awesome, with a chorus that kills:



My hair's not bouncy/what should I do?

My teeth aren't straight/my clothes aren't new

My freckles are weird/my hands aren't slender

I got too many problems to remember...



Everything's wrong/my face my hair

What they don't know/is that I don't care

I don't need you to tell me who to be

I'll decide what's wrong with me...



The lead singer/lead guitarist Sophie (no last name given) is a dynamic and compelling rock'n'roller. Her lyrics are generally sharp and incisive, and she combines sneers with sympathetic outsider-geek anthems, a combination of Joan Jett, Joey Ramone, and Poly Styrene of X-Ray Specs. And it's a good thing that, as her lyrics mention, that her hands aren't slender, 'cause this gal can really play guitar! The confidence, cleverness and talent of this band is tremendous -- far from being a novelty act, they are clearly a force to be reckoned with. If they stick to it, they could be real-deal rock stars of major proportions. Keep an ear to the ground to find out where they go from here! (DJ Joe Sixpack, Slipcue Music Guide)"
Perky pop-punk trio enters high-school
hyperbolium | Earth, USA | 09/24/2009
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Formed in a Brooklyn elementary school, this pop-punk girl trio has finally made it to high school. They issued an EP in 2006 and their first full-length in 2007, and after a few personnel changes, this second full-length in the summer of 2009. Their latest album is filled with originals that harken back to the roots of late `70s and early `80s punk rock, but unlike those twenty-something's songs of adolescence, Care Bears on Fire write youth rock as they live it. They play as a tight and punchy power-trio, and though their age is novel, and there's a cute edge to their young concerns, they're hardly a novelty.



So what's on the mind of 15-year-olds these days? For starters: girls who'll do anything to get their way, peer-pressure, materialism, individualism, the tribulations of school, the realities of social networking, and, of course, boys. The extra sharp combination of "Barbie Eat a Sandwich" and "My Problems" takes on the distorted images of beauty and normalcy hammered into young girls by media and society. All of this is wrapped up in hook-filled melodies, girlish harmonies, and sing-along choruses set to power-chords, thumping bass and crashing drums. The band has a very high ratio of musical quality to years-lived, with songs that aren't artificially grown-up, written to a calculated Disney heart-tugging angle, or brain-numbingly childish.



Care Bears on Fire hit a sweet-spot that's appealing to their peers and to adults wanting to get an earful of a literate teenager's day-to-day concerns. Kim Fowley tried, or at least purported to try, to elicit this sort of music from the Runaways and Venus & The Razorblades, but his manipulations left too many adult fingerprints and often gave their songs an artificial, inflammatory air. In contrast, Care Bears on Fire is the product of three teenagers and thankfully free of grown-up staging. This is terrific pop-punk that's melodic, honest, clever, powerful and lots of fun. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]"