The Bangles - Doll Revolution (A PopEntertainment.com Music Review)
- PopEntertainment
- Sep 25, 2003
- 2 min read

The Bangles - Doll Revolution (Victor-Japan)
Thirteen years on since the Bangles broke up... while on top of the charts and top of the world... here comes a reunion album that makes it seem like not a minute has passed since they went away. The group's jangly-Byrdsy pop-rock feels every bit as palatable today as it did in their glory days. Right now the band is in negotiations for this piece of prime musicianship to be released in the US. While waiting for the album to get a US release date, it's totally worth tracking down as an import.
Unlike so many comeback albums, Doll Revolution deserves a place in the band's history with their classic platters All Over the Place and Different Light. The wonderful strength of the band is that they have four very different yet complimentary lead singers and songwriters, in guitarists Susanna Hoffs and Vicki Peterson, bassist Michael Steele and drummer Debbi Peterson.
The album starts off with a smoking cover of Elvis Costello's recent single "Tear Off Your Head (It's A Doll Revolution.)" While that is an auspicious lead-off, the originals that follow are even better. Hoffs' song "Something That You Said," is an irresistibly catchy song which could be a huge hit if it ever gets heard, as would her gorgeous ballad "I Will Take Care Of You" (which is a little reminiscent of Hoffs' classic power ballad "Eternal Flame.")
The band has a wonderfully 60s vibe on Debbi Peterson's "Ask Me No Questions." "The Rain Song" is a lovely song that Vicki Peterson has resurrected from her side-project The Continental Drifters (with Susan Cowsill.) Micki Steele, long the band's somewhat overlooked secret weapon, contributes the sweetly nostalgic "Nickel Romeo." Doll Revolution is both up-to-date and wonderfully timeless. The Bangles have been missed. Thank goodness they're back. (5/03)
Jay S. Jacobs
Copyright © 2003 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: September 25, 2003.
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