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Album review: Holy Ghost!’s debut album

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It’s tempting to consider Holy Ghost! a de facto replacement for LCD Soundsystem, which broke up last week to great fanfare. The group records for DFA Records -- the label headed by LCD leader James Murphy -- and even performed as accompanying musicians during LCD’s final television appearance on “The Colbert Report.” Aesthetically, the two bands share a love for merging rock vocals with dance-music classicism and, in particular, sonic nods to the greed decade.

Indeed, on Holy Ghost!’s debut album, a track like “It’s Not Over,” could be a lost New Order classic, and “Do It Again” manages to make Men Without Hats a cool influence. “Some Children,” meanwhile, engages in inspired stunt casting, bringing in an actual icon from previous musical eras, Doobie Brother Michael McDonald, for silky guest vocals.

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Where the students and the mentors diverge becomes clear over the course of the record, however. LCD builds songs out of drawn-out tension, primarily to showcase Murphy’s singular idiosyncrasy; Holy Ghost!, on the other hand, creates taut compositions where the search for the perfect hook seems the goal. Typically, the band succeeds: Just try getting the choruses of “Hold On” and “Say My Name” out of your head. As a result, Holy Ghost! has created a classic pop album, albeit one dressed for dancing in hipster finery.

-- Matt Diehl

Holy Ghost!
(DFA)
Three and a half stars

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