Can We Go Wrong

Can We Go Wrong
EP by Hesta Prynn
Released 6 July 2010
Genre Indie rock, Alternative hip hop
Length 18:15
Label Reynolds Recording Co./For Fire Music
Producer Chuck Brody
Hesta Prynn chronology
Can We Go Wrong
(2010)
Pepper
(2010)
Singles from Can We Go Wrong
  1. "Can We Go Wrong"
    Released: September 2010 (2010-09)
  2. "You Winding Me Up"
    Released: 8 December 2010 (2010-12-08)
New cover art

Can We Go Wrong is the first solo EP by Hesta Prynn, formerly of the band Northern State. It was officially released on July 6, 2010,[1][2][3] but was available weeks earlier through her own website and at her live concerts as the support act for Tegan and Sara. Even before the official release, the album received a positive review from Time Out New York.[4]

In September 2010 Hesta Prynn released a video for the song "Can We Go Wrong". The video is a stop-motion video composed of 13,000 still images.[5] The video was directed by NYC indie director Randy Scott Slavin (videethis.com) and received much attention including a feature on MTV's "The Seven".[6] Jared Leto of Thirty Seconds to Mars was intrigued by the video and took Hesta Prynn on tour in late 2010.

On December 8, 2010 the song "You Winding Me Up" was releases as a special 7" vinyl single containing two remixed versions of the song. The first is a mash-up with Blondie's Heart of Glass and the second is a remix by Bear Hands.[7]

Track listing

All songs written and composed by Hesta Prynn & Chuck Brody, except where noted. 

No. Title Length
1. "You Winding Me Up" (Prynn, Brody, Jon Siebels) 2:22
2. "Motive"   3:02
3. "Le Coq Aux Folles"   3:05
4. "Can We Go Wrong" (Prynn, Brody, Siebels) 3:10
5. "Whoa Whoa" (Prynn, Brody, Siebels) 3:37
6. "Recall"   2:59
Total length:
18:15

Personnel

Additional personnel

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
PopMatters [8]
AudioSuede(80%) [9]

PopMatters commented on her change in style orientation from hip-hop to dance and an increase in seriousness saying: "Compared to the verbose rhymes of her jokey Northern State work, Prynn is downright laconic here. She’s crafty with hooks, too, and the half-wordless chorus of “Whoa Whoa” owes its amorphousness not to nonchalance, but necessity; after a certain point in the night, words are irrelevant."

References

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