Paula Kelley is a genuine pure pop 
		auteur who is not in need of bandmates to confirm her considerable talents. In the 
		[course of her career], she has emerged as an impressively versatile songwriter, conversant in the 
		various strains of indie pop, bubblegum, and twee-pop.
		
Turning her love of the Pixies and Carole King into an ear for creating hybrid sounds, 
		Kelley found herself riding a wave of college press hype and European touring during her 
		stint in the short-lived Drop Nineteens, a leading light in the American shoegazer scene 
		during the alternative rock salad days of the early 1990’s. Not content to be a supporting 
		player, Kelley bided her time unhappily until preemptively leaving the band a year before 
		their demise in 1994. Rebounding to form Hot Rod, Kelley wasted no time finding her 
		footing, recording an album with a similar alternative rock pedigree but with more of her 
		pop proclivities on display. Still, this collaboration would prove transitory, as well, 
		as Kelley would move on to form Boy Wonder in 1996. Although gaining notoriety as one of 
		Boston’s best bands, not to mention releasing a few well-received albums of glorious 
		bubblegum-ish pop, Kelley bolted from Boy Wonder as a collaborator to fully indulge her 
		pop muse in the less confining role as solo songwriter in 2000. Now free to finally make 
		the undiluted pop masterpiece she has seem primed to make her whole professional career, 
		Nothing/Everything arrived in 2001 and hardly disappointed, showing Kelley’s willingness 
		to drift into the more pristine waters of pop music while leaving the volume and vigor of 
		alternative rock behind. — Matt Fink (AllMusic Guide)