Michael Hann 

Marmozets: The Weird and Wonderful Marmozets review – bursting with ideas

This impressive debut from the Yorkshire band is bursting with huge choruses and melodic hooks, writes Michael Hann
  
  

Sweetness and rage ... Marmozets.
Sweetness and rage ... Marmozets Photograph: PR

Google Marmozets – two sets of siblings, some still in their teens – and you’ll see them described, forebodingly, as a math-rock band. But while there are fiddly time signatures and intricate drum patterns on the Yorkshire quintet’s debut album, they take a distant second place in the list of priorities to metallic hooks and melodies. Singer Becca Macintyre keeps her own accent as she skips from sweetness to rage, and even if some of the lyrical sentiments don’t really merit scrutiny, they serve to provide huge choruses for Born Young and Free, Why Do You Hate Me? and Is It Horrible. Best of all, though, is the dynamism of the music: although songs flit around from riff to riff, as if Marmozets were bursting to fill each song with ideas, they are never too full, never just exercises in technique. It sounds, simply, as if Marmozets are the rock equivalent of Jordan from The Great British Bake Off, who wanted to make a cake that contained every single one of his favourite ingredients. And why not?

 

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