Posted in Album Reviews

Lykki Li – I Never Learn (2014)

51rd59ZQ1PL__AA160_In 2008, Swedish born Lykki Li put out one of my favourite albums of the year with Youth Novels. The synth pop tracks fit in perfectly with Robyn and Sally Shapiro. Wounded Rhymes followed in 2011 and was rougher around the edges, a bit more angry and seemed to signal a new direction. I Never Learn is Li’s third and takes another turn in her career. The bright eyed pop songs are gone as are much of the harder edges of more recent times. With the help of Bjorn Yttling of Peter Bjorn and John, this collection of songs is far more grandiose than what’s come before.

The title track, and first song, sets the bar high. It’s one of the more stripped down tracks with mostly just an acoustic guitar but still sounds heavenly with the addition of strings and “ahhhhs” that appear midway through. “Love Me Like I’m Not Made of Stone” is raw with Li’s most pained vocal, her voice straining in the chorus as she sings the title. You can literally hear her heartbreaking as she sings.

“Gunshot” gets a smack in the arm with the chorus but sounds like it could be sung by any new pop starlet that the music industry endlessly pumps out. The titles of “Never Gonna Love Again” and “Heart of Steel” say all you need to know and would fit in with any Diane Warren track written in the last 25 years. While impeccably produced and better in small doses, I Never Learn can be a hard slog when swallowed whole.

6/10

Posted in Album Reviews

Lana Del Rey – Ultraviolence (2014)

51Jh-rrGUNL__AA160_In 2012, Lana Del Rey shot to stardom (or maybe just infamy) off her first single, “Video Games”. From out of nowhere, everyone seemed to have an opinion on her. From Del Rey’s love it or hate it appearance on Saturday Night Live (I loved it), her much talked about past, a massive amount of remixes and a clutch of singles that eventually lead to very mixed reviews of her major label debut, Born To Die. Right from the start I loved the singles but stayed away from the debut after the reviews started to come out. I ended up buying Born To Die several months later and thought much of it was brilliant and as a whole, hung together quite well. Now Ms. Del Rey is back a sophomore effort, Ultraviolence.

There isn’t much variation throughout. The music is a bit 60s, a bit Portishead, a bit cinematic, etc. The vocals are all deadpan, played straight and without much feeling. The first third of the album, including the title track, all slip by without much notice. “Brooklyn Baby” doesn’t sound much different from what came before but what sets it apart is the lyrics and how they are sung – “you say I’m like the ice I freeze, I’m churning out novels like Beat poetry on amphetamines”, the one word Brooklyn accent in the second chorus, and the “da da da”s along to the guitar. Single “West Coast” follows and hits a bit harder both musically and vocally than anything else on the album before the beautifully lush chorus.

Lana Del Rey is not as good a singer as Adele and the music here isn’t anywhere near as classic sounding as say, Dusty in Memphis. Where Del Rey shines when her ultra-cool stories border on the ridiculous and are sung with a wink. It’s hard not to smile while listening to tracks like “Money Power and Glory”, “Fucked My Way To The Top” and especially bonus track “Florida Keys” where she’s slinging drugs in Miami. That’s the Del Rey that I like, far too cool and completely over the top, unfortunately there isn’t enough of that here. While Ultraviolence is ultimately not quite as consistent as Born To Die, there are still a handful of songs that shine and are ready made to be remixed over and over again.

7/10

Posted in Album Reviews

Marissa Nadler – July (2014)

41qGoRq4rJL__AA160_I had never heard of Marissa Nadler before seeing her album review on Pitchfork way back in early February. What initially struck me about it was the stark album cover, a mostly black cover with a woman standing in front of a window. I wrote the name down and ordered it after I kept hearing about how good the album is… but then didn’t get around to actually listening to it for a couple more months. Why do I even have a blog?

July is Nadler’s sixth album and it is mostly as stark as that album cover. Acoustic guitar is the main accompaniment to Nadler’s country-like singing tones which at times can swoop like Patsy Cline. There is desolate yet dreamy atmosphere throughout, a trend which gets acknowledged in the title of “Was It a Dream”. “I’ve Got Your Name” could soundtrack a David Lynch movie scene – “Riding back to Massachusetts, couldn’t even see from snow, the road was studded in Christmas trees”. A deep regret of a past relationship comes through in both “Anyone Else” and “Holiday In”.

Records that sound like this are usually tailor made for summer evenings, sitting in backyards and staring at empty fields. July is different; it feels like it was recorded for winter nights, even if the title thinks differently. The backing vocals in “Drive” sound like a Northern wind blowing right through the song. As I sit here on this Labour Day weekend, the traditional end to summer where everyone clears out to their cabins, the empty town in “Dead City Emily” rings true. It’s hard to be a sleeper of a record when every publication has name checked it, but as the nights get colder and duvets start getting pulled out of the closet, Marissa Nadler’s July is a special one to have on your record player and clasped close to your chest.

9/10