Horsegirl Find Resonance Through Repetition with Phonetics On and On
On their Cate Le Bon-produced sophomore record, Phonetics On and On, the quirky Chicago-to-New York trio grow up and grow into their influences.

One of the greatest feats of songwriting—of any writing, really—is arranging words into combinations that no one else has ever constructed before. Contrarily, there’s also a challenge in taking a phrase or expression that’s been echoed a million times, and using it in a way that forces the audience to really think about these familiar words. The latter is where a record like Phonetics On and On, the sophomore effort from formerly-Chicago-now-New-York-based rock band Horsegirl, thrives. As its title suggests, Phonetics is a record closely concerned with the shape and texture of each sound.
This knack for making the familiar sound foreign isn’t limited to phrases or even individual words. The frequent passages of wordless vocalization on this record don’t feel like filler. All the “oohs” and “da da das” are instrumentation as much as they are lyrical diversions. They’re just another piece in the multi-faceted mosaic of sound that places Phonetics in the intersecting lineages of post-punk, art rock and twee pop, mapped out by forebears like Dolly Mixture, Shop Assistants, The Raincoats and—the influence worn most prominently on Horsegirl’s sleeves—The Velvet Underground.
The rumble of Gigi Reece’s drums ushers in the call-and-response hook of opener “Where’d You Go,” before the song spins out into a wiry, “Heroin”-reminiscent guitar outro, while more downtempo tracks like “Rock City” and “Julie” recall the eerie simmer of Velvet Underground & Nico’s most haunting slow-marches. Similarly to The Velvet Underground’s ever-influential debut, the Cate Le Bon-produced Phonetics has an affinity for stretching the distance between instruments and hypnotically fixating on a single musical element (akin to the punishing sheen of the guitar chords on “Venus In Furs,” or the dirgelike chimes parading through “All Tomorrow’s Parties”). Closer “I Can’t Stand To See You” is Horsegirl’s “After Hours,” a mellow singalong that begins with Nora Cheng extending an invitation: “Do you want to go home now? / The night’s almost through / Let’s sit on the floor now / And talk, me and you.” A copy of Lou Reed’s classic solo album Transformer lurks in the background of the “Switch Over” music video as a piece of blink-and-you-miss-it set dressing.
The members of Horsegirl were in high school in Chicago when they signed to famed indie label Matador Records for their 2022 debut LP, Versions of Modern Performance (which made our list of the best albums of 2022). Along with bands like Friko, Dwaal Troupe, Sharp Pins and Matador labelmates Lifeguard, Horsegirl are a part of the Chicago-based Hallogallo Collective (named after a song by the 70s krautrock group Neu!). A multimedia project spearheaded by artist Kai Slater (who plays in a few of the aforementioned bands), Hallogallo’s website features a kitschy, brightly-colored interface and the collective’s slogan on the homepage in all-caps: YOUTH REVOLUTION NOW.
While Horsegirl and their peers are all still quite young—late teens and early twenties—they’re just starting to age out of the tired sensationalization that comes with being a young person who dares to make art that’s actually interesting and important. In the three years since releasing Versions of Modern Performance, the members of Horsegirl have relocated to New York for college. What happens, then, when a beloved stalwart of the Chicago teen rock scene grows up and leaves their home city? Rather than making their “leaving home” record a pointed assertion of maturity by taking a markedly explicit, heady or conceptual turn, Phonetics showcases the band’s most curious and playful impulses.