Features

t.A.T.u.

Red-headed Lena Katina and brown-haired Julia Volkova are t.A.T.u., two Russian teenagers who may or may not be lesbians involved in a steamy underage relationship; 200 km/h in the Wrong Lane, their English-language debut, is scorched-earth teen-exploitation pop nearly as good as "My Boyfriend's Back" and "Leader of the Pack."...
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

Red-headed Lena Katina and brown-haired Julia Volkova are t.A.T.u., two Russian teenagers who may or may not be lesbians involved in a steamy underage relationship; 200 km/h in the Wrong Lane, their English-language debut, is scorched-earth teen-exploitation pop nearly as good as “My Boyfriend’s Back” and “Leader of the Pack.” Obviously, this is the point: “All the Things She Said,” a bubblegum-industrial monster of a song that’s dominated Europe like the bubonic plague, tells the tale of the girls’ star-crossed love in a head-explodingly simple translation of the Russian (which, to be fair, probably ain’t Chekhov): “Being with you has opened my eyes,” they sing. “Could I ever believe such a perfect surprise?” But the tune is fixed at such a ridiculously melodramatic fever pitch clanging programmed drums; crunchy power chords; Lena and Julia’s high, adenoidal vocals; a killer synth solo that it makes the provocative story line thrilling, a human drama bigger than any Svengali’s get-rich-quick scheme. The girls’ rendition of the Smiths’ “How Soon Is Now?” already an electrifying portrait of young-person hysteria is even better; when they sing, “I am human and I need to be loved,” the emotion swallows the song it’s Avril Lavigne discovering how complicated things can really get. Of course, 200 km/h‘s not all high dudgeon: Former Buggle Trevor Horn slickened the album’s sound for American audiences (the joke being that the racy, rain-soaked video for “All the Things She Said” absolutely made these radio stars), and he makes saccharine-rush Eurocheese out of “Clowns (Can You See Me Now?),” an indecipherable howl of Eastern European paranoia. Still, perhaps despite themselves, t.A.T.u. have tapped into some immortal teenage drama here; they’re not that big, but they’re awfully strong.

Never miss another concert announcement

Sign up for our free music newsletter. We’ve got the latest on the artists you love.

Loading latest posts...