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| | Mia Doi Todd: Zeroone: Pitchfork Review (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17) |
 | | That album, Zeroone, the first release on City Zen Records, was released to significantly less fanfare than it would have received if it came out on, say, Sub Pop, which is too bad because it's at least as good as her debut, although not much of a progression. |
 | | Harrowing, introspective, bare-bones voice and guitar, with emphasis on complex lyrical interplay, Zeroone is brimming with verbal puns and extended metaphors, all delivered with a voice that will stop you cold and send you running to either the repeat or stop button, depending what you look for in a vocalist. |
 | | Imagine Tim Buckley meets Nico and you'll be in the ballpark of her sultry croons. |
| www.pitchforkmedia.com /record-reviews/t/todd_miadoi/zeroone.shtml (555 words) |
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