Heavenly's first album is a remarkable maturation of
Talulah Gosh's old manic guitar strum. The melodies are every bit as peppy, but the shambolic chaos is transformed into a sound that, while still jumpy and loose, is much more restrained and sweetly melodic. Similarly, singer
Amelia Fletcher's vocals are still cute and girlish, but she's learned a lot more about the concept of pitch, and she's well on her way to becoming one of the most influential singers on the '90s
indie pop scene.
Heavenly Vs. Satan is considerably less sophisticated than
Heavenly's later albums would become (keyboardist
Cathy Rogers hadn't yet joined the group, so her keyboard lines and vitally important secondary vocals are missed here), but the songs are among the group's most deliriously giddy. Even wistful love-from-afar tunes like
"Lemonhead Boy" and
"Cool Guitar Boy' (
indie pop's '90s fascination with other bands and love seen in grade-school terms can largely be traced to this album's example) are sweetly catchy, with
Peter Momtchiloff's jangleriffic guitar and
Fletcher's dreamy, wistful vocals carrying the songs out of the trap of cutesiness so many of their followers would fall into. This is an absolute classic of the
indie pop genre, but later albums like
Le Jardin de Heavenly and
The Decline & Fall of Heavenly would be even better. ~ Stewart Mason