Hot Dish is the debut of
Heart Bones, a collaboration between
Sean Tillmann (
Har Mar Superstar,
Sean Na-Na) and
Sabrina Ellis (
A Giant Dog,
Sweet Spirit), though it should quickly be noted that their other indie projects aren't exactly predictive of their sound. With
Ellis based in Austin and
Tillmann in Minneapolis-Saint Paul, the album was a long-distance endeavor that produced a quirky, carbonated version of synth pop, if one with familiar undercurrents of irreverence.
Hot Dish opens with the space-age, Technicolor dance-pop of "This Time It's Different." A bop made complete with a cheesy, late-arriving key change, it features both singers, also a trait of the rest of the album. Keeping things upbeat and eccentric, they rhyme "chunky peanut butter" and "funky motherf*cker" in second offering "I Like Your Way," a lively indie pop tune loaded with sexual themes, skittering drums, and good feelings all around. With minor diversions into disco, post-punk, and more-pastoral pop (the horn section-backed "Don't Read the Comments"), they keep the groove moving until it loses some stream the last third of the album, which holds the bulk of the slower, more bittersweet tracks. That section includes a heavily Auto-Tuned couples cover of the '80s
Eric Carmen hit "Hungry Eyes." The duo never let go of their whimsy, however, even with lyrics like "And now they're building a wall to keep us apart/They think they're breaking ground but they're just breaking my heart" on the closing spacecraft power ballad "Beg for It," which features robot-like vocal filters alongside natural voices. In the end,
Hot Dish is the odd album that sounds like it was nothing but fun to write and record, making it infectious in more ways than one. ~ Marcy Donelson