Cover of Oliver Houston Whatever Works
MikiNigagi

• Rating:

For fans of midwest emo, lovers of authentic emo and indie rock, those interested in niche emo scenes and genre-rooted music.
 Share

LA RECENSIONE

My intellectual dishonesty is measurable by the number of circumstances in which I've railed against genre products. Then, just as gladly, I've enjoyed albums like this, whose reason for existence is satisfying a demand declared by a circumscribed audience, the relevant scene, and nothing more. Whose form adheres philologically to the standards defined by the archetypes, the fetish records, the cult objects for homologous kids on the block.

It's a half scam, yet I buy it, because the scream at Bernie's intro can indiscriminately bring tears to my eyes, raise my fist to the sky as an automatic reflex, or compel me to a disdainful wisdom from "meh, pedantic."

I feel inclined, in these cases, to think in labels: #midwestemo #texasisthereason #mathemo, things like that. The judgment is arbitrary: *, ***,*****, 85.7 or 87.5, :') or :|, best album of the genre or lifeless knock-off. If a communicative urgency exists here, it is difficult to pinpoint, as it is subjugated by the most pressing need to adhere to the standards. The distinction risks being between the well done and the poorly done, at the edge of cultural conservatism.

If, for some strange reason, one feels like reading a detailed adjectivization of reactions, feelings, dynamics, then they should read the much already written by someone else, somewhere else, searching by sphere of influence. Read "what more do you want me to say about emo arpeggios, that they are poignant?"

Despite everything, assuming the only reason for this album is its very existence, I can say it is better that it exists, rather than not: new pieces for theme playlists/the highlight is Bernie. Goodbye.

Loading comments  slowly

Summary by Bot

Oliver Houston's 'Whatever Works' is an album deeply rooted in Midwest emo traditions, appealing strongly to dedicated fans of the genre. While it follows genre standards closely and may lack groundbreaking innovation, its emotional delivery—particularly in tracks like 'Bernie'—resonates powerfully. The album exists as a cult object for a niche audience, fulfilling expectations and delivering important additions to emo playlists. Ultimately, its existence is valued within its scene. It may not surprise those familiar with the style but satisfies its intended listeners.

Tracklist

01   Pho (02:04)

02   Bernie (02:12)

03   Tom Quad (03:29)

04   Peanut Boy (02:33)

05   Concessions (03:05)

06   Tough Luck (03:12)

07   Good Dog (02:41)

08   Milk Door (03:30)

09   Whatever Works (04:24)

10   Reprise (01:34)

Oliver Houston


01 Reviews