[5] "The band’s style of music has alternative written all over it, but what could be the rule breaker is the detachment from your typical indie stereotype of late and instead delving back into the heydays of Interpol and The Editors, with that little bit of added Irish charm of course!"
[6] Tony Clayton-Lea (The Irish Times) wrote on the band's debut album release for HMV.com and sited "The National and Interpol" as obvious influences but remarked that the songs were "well constructed".
[7] On the band's official website, they are described as "a prevalent brooding ambience intertwined with elegant piano, baritone vocals and a luring understated alt-rock quality".
[8] A review of the band's first-ever live performance by Hot Press magazine penned how O'Reilly "makes for an interesting frontman, with his shoulders often hunched and eyes downcast, clutching the mic and cord with two hands while bobbing and swaying to the beat in a manner similar to Leonard Cohen, fully absorbed in the music.
His baritone voice lands somewhere between the aforementioned and Lou Reed in its everyman cool, casual delivery and sounded right at home among the dreamy textures".