Nice review of the album on CMJ. It's only a matter of time before it gets skewered by one of the "hip" music sites...
DE NOVO DAHL: Cats And Kittens
You wonder how many bands have had the same conversation, all hot and pumped on their first full-length: "Crazy dance remixes of the whole record! Double-album debut!" But to actually go through with it? Thatâ??s some ambitious beginnings. You couldnâ??t accuse Nashville six-piece De Novo Dahl of shying away from wild ambitions, though, well beyond the fact that Cats & Kittens is a big, fat 32- track bear of a debut. Cats houses the straight mixes, an amalgam of ambitious pop, rock, new-wave and party-funk ideas that run from silly to somber to just plain weird. They reach varying results with the genre-jumpingâ??"Jeffrey"'s Flaming Lips-gone-glam quirk, "Ryan Patrick Huseman Darrow"'s Brit-rock bombast and "Be Your Man"'s popped-up garage grit are delectably effective, while "The Funk"'s goofy danceability feels a bit tired with repeated listensâ??but their grabbing from so many different bags is what makes them an exciting find. Kittens, meanwhile, holds the remixesâ??16 almost unrecognizable dance jams cobbled from bits and pieces of Catsâ?? tracks, chunky programmed beats, samples and synth squiggles. Was it better left as an idea that brought giggles to a band meeting? Nope. Had De Novo Dahl only released Kittens, theyâ??d likely rule Williamsburg by now. Itâ??s a wriggly collection of electro-pop that, while perhaps not as affecting as Cats, still purrs. As a whole, the bandâ??s first offering feels something like a well-made mix tape: a little incongruous, maybe, but bursting with brilliant individual ideas.
CMJ review