Members: Will Love-Vocals/Guitar, Mahsa Zargaran-Drums, Jeff Mendel-Guitar, Victoria Mordoch-Bass
Review of Roxy Show 8/19/2010
Sabrosa Purr
My favorite LA band use to be J* Davey, but now I think itâs Sabrosa Purr. Their show was completely enchanting. They are pure, un-cut rock-n-roll. Their sound is like Portishead meets Soundgarden, and just as beautiful to look at.
The chemistry of a female bassist and a female drummer on stage was refreshingly different. This band went from heavy riffs to a light ambient sound like they were unanimously switching on an off a light bulb. Their intimacy on stage gave me the chills.
For me, Sabrosa Purr was something unexpected, and that is what was so wonderful about their performance. Their cover of Eric Claptonâs âCocaineâ was unmatchable. Seriously, if you have a chance, donât miss their next show! They rocked me!
LA WEEKLY
Yes, there are still amateur Angeleno bands building robust reps through self-financed recordings and compelling club shows (and without monkeying themselves out to reality TV). Sabrosa Purr are an odd collision of loner, stoner introversion and crotch-thrusting fuzz-box rawk. They lurch from the ultra-ethereal, flotation-tank vocals and slithery, succulent guitars of "Suckerpunch Kiss" to the open-shirted glam strut of "Fashion Kills" without so much as an explanation or apology. Though probably more convincing at the former than the latter, they seldom sound contrived. Yet for every moment of earnest Pink Floyd-ish psychedelia, each hint of enigmatic early Cure b-sides or sexy T-Rex flexes, Sabrosa Purr are really all about the original Jane's Addiction -- they're eclectic because Jane's were. The heavily delayed yelps of "Killing the Aries" and "Sabrosa Purr, Pt. 1"'s druggy whimper are downright Jane's addicted, but they're lost in enough love to forget and forgive. Few bands traverse heel-stomping, classic-rock crunch and eyes-clenched, headphone bliss like this.-Paul Rodgers- LA Weekly
THE DELI MAGAZINE:
Thank the Los Angelinos gods for precious, little diamonds like Sabrosa Purr. Bands like this don't come by the dozen in this desert, and I have nothing but good things to say about their latest genre-defying release "To The Crickets and The Ghosts". Drawing inspiration from the likes of PJ Harvey, The Smashing Pumpkins and Pink Floyd, it's hard to pinpoint their exact sound (which, as in "My Song For The Girls", can leap from a low, quietly hypnotic guitar line [think "No Surprises" by Radiohead] to the astronomical heights of a heavily fuzz-driven, scream singing tag [think MBV style Chorus with something like Bixler-Zavala-esque vocals in a few blinks of an eye], but whatever it is that they're mixing together in their rehearsal time, it slides down wonderfully and leaves me slamming my glass down on the bar and asking for another. I'm sure more than a handful of bands in the greater L.A. area can claim the previously mentioned groups as influences, but the way these musical scientists tastefully formulate their concoctions makes it fresh, dreamy, and definitely worth my time.- Alex Valles
FILTER MAGAZINE
"The three-piece has been turning heads with their daring dichotomy of high-octane rock and ambient soundscapes. Vocalist/guitarist Will Love has the uncanny ability to evoke PJ Harvey and Kurt Cobain, sometimes even in the same song as he goes from a guttural howl to a hushed croon. Critics have compared their sound to the Smashing Pumpkins, Janes Addiction and Pink Floyd while trend setting radio stations such as Seattle's KEXP and Los Angeles' Indie 103.1 have showed their support early on by playing several tracks off their EP."- Filter-Mag.com
ONE TIMES ONE
"Sabrosa Purr are the most mystifying, bizarre, and intriguing band youâll hear for a long while. They can swing from tender folk to bombastic metal at the drop of a hat, and it never seems forced or contrived. The simple answer is that this is a band that loves music, and loves so much of it that they canât be bothered to choose just one style. How rebellious, how bold."-Emily Tartanella
http://www.onetimesone.com/music-reviews/sabrosa-purr-music-from.php
This latest EP is a delightful trip out and spacey indie rock jam that needs to be heard. One minute you are basking in itâs floaty clouds of heaven, and then all of a sudden it thrusts you into the head of the monster as you are devoured for all its worth. Some of it reminds me of a more tripped out Janeâs Addiction, though definitely the early years.
The stand out track is clearly âThe Lovely People,â a rocker with thick as meat riffs and driving rhythm that will have you bopping your head. Itâs dirty, free of disease and yet so intoxicating you probably shouldnât drive after hearing it. You could easily hear this one on that big corporate alternative rock station in your area (if you even still have one) or in the back corner of that ultra cool record store you sometimes visit. Word of advice: next time youâre there make sure and pick this one up.
///Your/Love/Drug!///
said:
Will is a funky nice person. veg all the way! .llew uoy hsiw I ///BRi ((keep rocking the manson influence loves!)) Dec 21
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