Rating:
Genre:
Rock
Release Date: 08/16/2005
Aly & AJ are sort of a double-vision version of
Hilary Duff. Like
Hilary, who started out portraying the plucky
Lizzie McGuire,
Aly co-stars as
Keely Teslow on the
Disney Channel's
Phil of the Future. She had her first singing success with a bubbly take on
the Lovin' Spoonful's
"Do You Believe in Magic" that shot to the top of the charts on
Radio Disney, and with her younger sister
AJ contributed to the
soundtracks for the
Disney films
Herbie: Fully Loaded (another cover,
"Walkin' on Sunshine") and
Ice Princess (
"No One," a melodic descendant of
Avril Lavigne's
"I'm with You"). In 2005 the Michalka sisters make their album debut with
Into the Rush, released like
Hilary's
Metamorphosis through the
Disney-owned
Hollywood Records. All of their initial singles are here, which is nice for fans hoping to avoid buying all those
soundtracks. And the rest of
Rush isn't all that different. It's more ambitious than freshly scrubbed
teen pop, but doesn't venture further than offering a few empowering
ballads and the concise, professionally processed
pop of
"Collapsed" and
"Something More." Aly & AJ get writing credits on every song here except the covers. But they've worked closely with a bank of producers and co-writers, and that ensures that
Into the Rush has the right mixture of personal touch and corporate marketability. "All lead and background vocals sung by
Aly & AJ," the liner notes read, so it's nearly impossible to tell who's who. But
Aly & AJ can actually sing -- their vocals have more way personality than prefab
Disney hopefuls like
Hayden Panettiere or
Caleigh Peters -- and the arrangements are slick without resorting to flashily empty pap. The sisters are lyrically limited -- "I didn't know what was in store/When I walked right through the door/Then I saw you over there/Our blue eyes locked in a stare" -- but what do you expect? This is music written to entertain 'tweens. It's notable then that
Into the Rush is listenable, likeable, and more about being memorable than being
Disney product. Smart move --
Duff took a similar route on her first record, and look what happened to her.
~Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide