Critic's Notebook

Tegan and Sara

The whole girl-with-a-guitar genre is like your first "A Woman Needs a Man Like a Fish Needs a Bicycle" bumper sticker: Its overt earnestness is initially very empowering and, subsequently, extremely embarrassing once you've moved out of the dorm and into the messy, "post-feminist" world full of things like strap-ons...
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The whole girl-with-a-guitar genre is like your first “A Woman Needs a Man Like a Fish Needs a Bicycle” bumper sticker: Its overt earnestness is initially very empowering and, subsequently, extremely embarrassing once you’ve moved out of the dorm and into the messy, “post-feminist” world full of things like strap-ons and Peaches (wait — is that redundant?). So Jealous, the third album from twin Canadian girls-with-a-guitar Tegan and Sara, epitomizes coming to terms with that shift in perspective. 2000’s This Business of Art was all coffee-shop confessionals for the baby dyke set, while 2003’s If It Was You was a sort of indie rock rebellion against the DiFranco aesthetic. On So Jealous, the sisters’ brittle little voices process relationships over catchy hooks and garage-rock grinding. The album is about finding a balance between the fervent girl power of one’s youth and the tempering of that ardor by the big, bad world — and ending up with a well-rounded, grown-up, and, ultimately, pretty damn likable sound in the process.

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