TV Girl is an American indie pop band from San Diego, California, consisting of Brad Petering, Jason Wyman, Brayden Patterson, and Wyatt Harmon.[1][2] The group is now based in Los Angeles.[3]
TV Girl | |
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![]() TV Girl performing in 2017 | |
Background information | |
Origin | San Diego, California, U.S. |
Genres | Indie pop |
Years active | 2010–present |
Members |
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Past members |
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Website | tvgirl |
Though they failed to break into the critical mainstream, TV Girl has amassed a cult following, and their debut album French Exit is considered a staple in the indie music scene, being called "remarkably solid" by Bandwagon Magazine[4] and "one of the most focused indie-pop albums of the past decade" by The Daily Targum.[5]
TV Girl's 2012 mixtape The Wild, The Innocent, The TV Shuffle was released and given away for free with an accompanying downloadable coloring book.[1] This mixtape would have been their debut album, but the duo expressed that this work didn't feel official enough to be their first album and felt that the term mixtape was more appropriate.[1]
TV Girl frequently samples songs and media from the 1960s in their music. An example of this is seen in the song "Lover's Rock," where the backing track is created from a looped sample of the intro to the Shirelles' single "The Dance is Over", which was originally released in 1960. In a post to Reddit, Petering writes he "..never gets tired of seeking out old and obscure music. I listen to lots of music and I find my loops and sounds that way."[6]
TV Girl is generally regarded as indie pop,[1] or sometimes as hypnotic pop.[7] Similarly to trip hop, the band blends elements of hip hop and electronic music. This is due to their use of sampling, keyboards, and reverb effects.[8][9] The duo was upset when their music was labeled "sundrenched California pop," pointing out that there are no lyrical allusions in their music that warrant the title.[1]
Lyrically, a majority of TV Girl's discography revolves around love and relationships. One example of this could be the song “Lover's Rock”, a love ballad named after the reggae sub-genre of lover's rock. Their subject matter is nostalgic and sad, but simultaneously sarcastic and humorous.[1] Some motifs in the duo's lyrics include women, heartbreak, cynicism, sex, memories, cigarettes, hair, women's first names, and loneliness. They are also known for their use of vintage audio samples that are sampled into many of their songs, including "Not Allowed," "Lovers Rock," "Cigarettes out the Window," and "Birds Don't Sing."[7]
Band Growth
Brad Petering, the lead singer of the band, has acknowledged the positive impact TikTok has had on the band itself and their album titled French Exit.[10]
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