Billie the Vision & the  Dancers - I Used to Wander These Streets (2008)
The fourth album from the lovable misfits in Billie the Vision & the  Dancers doesn’t offer any significant changes from the three that came  before it; it’s just another easily enjoyable batch of sweet, playful,  sincere ramshackle twee pop. There are still plenty of love-lorn lyrics  centered around the fictitious everypeople Lily and Pablo, though Lars Lindquist also pens some particularly personal narratives, recounting his  childhood move from Denmark to Sweden in “Stuttering Duckling,” tenderly  delving into candid sexual realism in “You’re Not Giving Up on Me,” and  detailing an eye-opening, guilt-ridden experience in London’s queer  nightclub scene in the poignant “Swedish Sin.” Other highlights include  the bright, sunny pop of opener “Lily from the Middleway Street,” the  shuffle-ska “Groovy,” a guest vocal from Annika Norlin (of Hello Saferide) on “I Belong to You,” and a surprisingly effectiveGuns N’ Roses interpolation on the break-up ballad “Liar and a Thief.” ~ K. Ross Hoffman, AMG

Billie the Vision & the Dancers - I Used to Wander These Streets (2008)

The fourth album from the lovable misfits in Billie the Vision & the Dancers doesn’t offer any significant changes from the three that came before it; it’s just another easily enjoyable batch of sweet, playful, sincere ramshackle twee pop. There are still plenty of love-lorn lyrics centered around the fictitious everypeople Lily and Pablo, though Lars Lindquist also pens some particularly personal narratives, recounting his childhood move from Denmark to Sweden in “Stuttering Duckling,” tenderly delving into candid sexual realism in “You’re Not Giving Up on Me,” and detailing an eye-opening, guilt-ridden experience in London’s queer nightclub scene in the poignant “Swedish Sin.” Other highlights include the bright, sunny pop of opener “Lily from the Middleway Street,” the shuffle-ska “Groovy,” a guest vocal from Annika Norlin (of Hello Saferide) on “I Belong to You,” and a surprisingly effectiveGuns N’ Roses interpolation on the break-up ballad “Liar and a Thief.” ~ K. Ross Hoffman, AMG

  1. supercrushpop posted this
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