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pairofmirrors-blog · 11 years
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Directed & Edited by Mike Juneau Produced by Martha Meredith foresmemusic.com heisthefuture.com
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pairofmirrors-blog · 11 years
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For Esmé shot by Petra Collins
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pairofmirrors-blog · 12 years
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Kathleen Edwards - "Chameleon/Comedian" 
Voyageur
The title of this album is Voyageur, but it may as well be Canadiana. Not the Broken Toronto Social Scene Canadiana, Montreal Arcade-Fire avant-garde, or Vancouverite New Pornographers musical collective. Kathleen Edwards' music is more in the spirit of this land's famous small towns: Peterborough, Winnipeg, Grand Manan, Moose Jaw, Nanaimo. Just like these towns, Voyageur is not new, or groundbreaking, or terribly exciting. It is not an album you can easily call "interesting." Yet it has a quiet beauty about it that is at once intoxicating and entirely inexplicable.
On Voyageur, Edwards showcases her ability to write simple, stirring songs. The songs are in fact so simple that, at first listen, they can appear almost bland. There is really no "secret ingredient" in her music, and her general "sound" is about 5-8 years too late (see, for instance, the background Shania-like sha-la-las on "Mint"). And yet, Voyageur will burrow. After a couple of listens, you will wake up craving Voyageur in the middle of the night. The "Chameleon/Comedian" lyrical interplay will go from "yeah, I get it" to "wow, that's genius". The punch line of "For the Record" - "for the record, I only wanted to sing songs" - will become the most disarming of proclamations. I honestly don't know what it is about Voyageur, I don't know what makes it so stunning. A transient, elusive spirit runs through the album, and that spirit will make itself known to the listener over time. 
With Voyageur, Kathleen Edwards' is beginning to establish her place in the Canadian music family. Most notably, it is evident that Edwards is the next in line of the great Canadian female singer-songwriters: Alanis Morissette, Sarah Harmer, Christine Fellows, and Sarah McLachlan. She is also much like her other co-patriots, Neil Young and John K. Samson, in that the simplicity and the seeming mundaneness of her songs is the very reason for their greatness. Above all, the stunning Voyageur is proof that the "old-school" style of singing-songwriting is alive and well in This Great Land. 
And don't go looking for Justin Vernon on this album. Voyageur is all Kathleen. 
-L
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pairofmirrors-blog · 12 years
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Norah Jones - Little Broken Hearts 
"Little Broken Hearts" 
This is not the Norah Jones you know and love. This is not multiple Grammy-winner Norah Jones. This is not your dinner-party smooth-jazz Norah Jones, or Strabucks Norah Jones, or on-repeat-in-your-mom's-car Norah Jones. 
Make no mistake - those who liked the old Norah Jones will not like Little Broken Hearts. But those who were not so enthused with songs like "Don't Know Why" will find Little Broken Hearts to be a realization of this Texas girl's country-blues-folk potential. 
It is not difficult to guess what inspired Little Broken Hearts: a break-up. Somewhere around Christmas of 2007, Jones split up with her long-term dude slash musical partner Lee Alexander. Instead of working with Alexander on Little Broken Hearts, Jones teamed with two absolute rock-star producers: Daniele Luppi and Danger Mouse, the very guys who released Rome with Jones and Jack White back in 2011. In their own right,  Luppi is well known for his cinematic scoring work, while Danger Mouse is an absolute legend, having produced everyone from Beck to the Black Keys. 
At the forefront of Little Broken Hearts is, well, Jones' breakup. Throughout the entire album, Jones' lyrics provide insight into the inner workings of her heart, as well as the catastrophe which it suffered: "She's 22 and she's loving you / And you'll never know how it makes me blue / Does she make you happy?" from "She's 22", or "Words spoken silently / I could never understand / How breath delivers such poison / To someone too weak to stand" from "Take It Back". In terms of themes and content, Little Broken Hearts is much like Adele's 21: if you invest a little time into listening to the album as a whole, you will discover exactly what happened that fateful Christmas of '07. At some point there was love, then there was betrayal ("She's 22"), there was uncertainty ("Good Morning"), there was regret ("Say Goodbye"), there was loss ("Little Broken Hearts"), there was anger ("Happy Pills"), and finally there was a new beginning ("Out on the Road"). Oh and, at one point, Jones murdered this chick called Miriam, who may or may not have been getting it on with said long-term dude (see "Miriam"). 
Yet a lot of credit has to be given to Luppi and Danger Mouse. While Jones' lyrics in themselves are cutting, the song execution takes Little Broken Hearts to a new level. The hush, whispery tone of Jones' voice on the title track, the way it is accompanied by a lonely, monotone guitar, the minor piano chords and ghostly backup singers which intersperse throughout, make "Little Broken Hearts" positively terrifying. Lee Alexander is definitely losing it somewhere. Then there are songs like "Good Morning" and "She's 22" where there is almost no instrumentation - Norah Jones' voice is powerful enough as it is, and Luppi and Danger Mouse do well not to obstruct it. My favourite touch, however, is the constant presence of a lil' bit of country twang: the slide guitar on "Take it Back", the easy strums of "Out on the Road", the hush, layered bass on "All a Dream". Daniele Luppi and Danger Mouse finally figured out that Norah Jones is not a watered-down jazz singer, and for that, they deserve a great deal of credit. 
-L 
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pairofmirrors-blog · 13 years
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John K Samson – Provincial
“Heart of the Continent”
Many albums, many very good albums, operate on a very simple strategy – they make you live a dream.  Last year, albums like Watch the Throne and Take Care played out a millionaire’s fantasy in their listeners’ minds, while those listeners’ pockets were becoming more and more depleted (“25 sitting on 25 mil”, anyone?). There are albums that are dreams of earth-shattering, mythical, out-of-this world love – The Decemberists’ Hazards of Love and The Morning Benders’ Big Echo are perfect examples.  On the flipside, there are albums that plunge the listener into the nightmarish darkness of the artists’ mind – in themselves a certain kind of dream – that make you reconsider all that existential poetry you wrote after your last breakup. I’m thinking here of For Emma, Forever Ago, of My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy, Alligator by the National, and much of Emily Haines’ solo work, just to name a few. And then, there are albums that just allow you to get a glimpse of what it would be like to be in the artist’s shoes – i.e., pretty much everything by Old Crow Medicine Show, Let England Shake by PJ Harvey, Acid Tongue by Jenny Lewis, or The Harrow and the Harvest by Gillian Welch.
In simple terms, many albums seek to take you away from yourself; to provide you with a fantasy. While this is admirable and likely necessary occupation for musicians, one man, John K. Samson, has always sought to attain a different end through his music. Whether with his seminal Canadian band The Weakerthans, or though his solo work , Samson has sought to say no, you don’t need to go outside yourself to see beauty, to see meaning, to see love. The ingredients for those feelings are already present within you – they are a priori to your very existence - and it is not a change in these ingredients but a different way of looking at them that will produce freedom, beauty, love.
I have to preface – if you can call 3 paragraphs deep into a piece prefacing – by admitting that John K. Samson is, quite uncontestably, my favorite songwriter of all time. My love for his music is long and strong. It began with my fascination as a 13-year old with “One Great City” a.k.a. “I Hate Winnipeg”, and a subsequent very strong, now ten-year desire to actually travel to Winnipeg one of these days (yes, like a pilgrimage). When thinking about the impact of Samson’s music on me, I’m always reminded of Emma Thomson’s observation about Joni Mitchell in the movie “Love Actually”: “Joni Mitchell taught your cold English wife how to love”. Although I can’t say that I in any way partake in the identity of a “cold English wife” (at least not yet), John Samson’s music, as music should, has taught me how to love. And not just love in the romantic sense, although that certainly figures, but love for all things big and small: the way that winter dies the same way every spring; the clash of sadness and optimism when you’re facing a sun in an empty room; the simple warmth of all kinds of nostalgia, like a fire door that we kept propping open; and how good it is sometimes to just hang out, with someone good – to sit and watch the wall, you painted purple. I’m going to stop now even though I don’t want to (for your sake), but I could really go on for pages.
(A funny/irrelevant aside – just last night, as I was hanging out with my significant other, with this piece on my mind, the lyric popped into my mind and I just blurted out: “I’m so glad that you exist!” This was followed by a well-deserved “aw” from the said other, at which point I had to confess: “Actually, that’s a John Samson line.” Unfortunately my other is not (yet!) as versed in his JKS as me, and somewhat indignantly, he went “Who’s John Samson!”, thinking that he’s some random dude. Anyway, no worries and I have since cleared up who Johns Samson is.)
On January 24, 2012, the new Samson album, titled, ever-so-aptly, Provincial, was finally released to the masses. For me, the album represented a whole new field of dreams – an opportunity for twelve more songs to become complete beloveds.In the weeks leading up to the album I listened incessantly to The Weakerthans and to Samson’s other solo work, distilling his lyrical work to its fundamental components. On Provincial, I was hoping to find a continuation of the same trusty themes that permeate Samson’s work – winter, hockey, memories, Canada, hospitals, highways, cats, love, curling, regret, life, and of course, Winnipeg – a city for small lives. Above all, I wanted new thoughtful Samson songs to sink my teeth into, new tunes to play and level with for years to come.
Man, were my prayers ever answered. By the time I got to the end of the opener, “Highway 1 East”, I was hooked. The song is about driving east, and letting your mind get lost, on the Trans-Canada: Scratch Saskatchewan away/ Make Manitoba paper dolls/ Lift up a lie from highway 1/ To tie Ontario.
“Heart of the Continent”, the album’s second track, is a Samson classic . The story of the song goes something like this: some time in 2008, the city of Winnipeg went ahead and re-branded itself. For years, Winnipeg greeted its drivers with “Winnipeg: One Great City.” However, as of 2008, Winnipeg became more into seeing itself as the “Heart of the Continent”, and it changed its welcome signs appropriately. Of course, this made Samson’s quintessential Winnipeg track “One Great City”, (you know, the “I Hate Winnipeg” ode to the town), rather out of date. The new Winnipeg tune, “Heart of the Continent”, appears on Provincial.  The song is a brooding and thoughtful little number, both about Winnipeg, and not. The key lyric is near the end – There’s a billboard on the highway/ That says “Welcome to – Bienvenue” / But no sign to show you when you go away”.
Is Samson just talking about Winnipeg, reflecting on the town’s desire to affect and change itself through this seemingly meaningless gesture? Or is he talking about so many other things? Maybe he’s saying, isn’t it funny, isn’t it just so human, that so many of us do the same thing as Winnipeg on a fairly regular basis? We rebrand, we make new signs. We think our new job, new home, new year, new hobby, new friends, new love will change us, will make us new, different – but in reality these things are often simply signage changes, hanging on the exterior of the same old you. But beyond that rather depressing thought, as there always is with Samson, there’s a tentative good, a fragile lesson, a shaky exclamation mark. When you start feeling like, goddammit, you’re going to run out of new signs soon, is the point when you forget about the signs and start appreciating what they stand for. For Samson in “Heart of the Continent”, it’s looking at how shitty Winnipeg can be – north wind sinks the fence around a lot full of debris/ Near the corner of Memorial and me – and extracting from this rather grim setting an implicit, transcendent beauty. He’s confirming the age-old truism that beauty is in the eye of the beholder. So if you really want to see it – in Winnipeg, or in you – then you will.
Another absolutely stand-out song on Provincial is “Letter in Icelandic From Ninnette San”. This is a different kind of Samson classic. Here, Samson shows his abilities as a true poet, spinning words that flow like milk and honey from one verse to the next. You don’t ever get to find out what this song is really about – there’s a hospital involved, vague references to Icelandic epics, and persons known only to John. But that doesn’t really matter. What matters is that this song, with Samson’s endearing, slightly nasally voice and the shuffle drums that remind oh-so-much of “Fallow”, is as close to perfect as they come:
Bev Monroe and his panel of alley boys play at the party
And I practice my English on nurses, “oh that’s a nice name”.
And they may ask me for mine, but the burns on my back from the x-rays,
Say I shouldn’t show anyone anything ever again.
On “The Last And”, another shuffling beauty, Samson spins a tale of a staff-room love gone wrong. His descriptions are so deep and so touching, that one cannot help but feel for the downcast, probably somewhat chubby, substitute teacher protagonist: When your voice springs from the intercom/With announcements, and reminders, and prayers/ I remember how you made me feel/ I was funny, I was thoughtful, I was rare. The song culminates in simple words laden with unspeakable burdens: I know I’m just your little ampersand. 
In contrast, songs like “Petition” and “When I Write My Master’s Thesis” provide light reprisals during the album’s heavier moments. On “Master’s Thesis”, John tells a story of a grad student whose whole life, seemingly, will unfurl in a rainbow of awesomeness once he finally gets down to writing his Master’s thesis: No more marking, first-years' papers/No more citing sources, sources, sour-ces! In similar vein, “Petition” is a song which looks to induct Reggie ‘The Riverton Rifle’ Leach into the Hockey Hall of Fame. The song doubles as an online petition, which can be found and signed here: http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/rivertonrifle/donate. A chorus of what I can only imagine to be proud Winnipegans (ians?) accompany Samson throughout the song with one monotonic demand: We, the undersigned, put forth his name, to the Hockey Hall of Fame.
At the end of the day, Provincial is an absolutely sublime effort, and one which is long overdue from Canada’s best songwriter. Here, John K. Samson manages to be both moving and gentle, poignant yet effortless. He has, once again, come up with easy songs that talk about hard things, good things, bad things, and just things – a beautiful portrayal of just another day in the life of an average (Canadian) you. 
To be completely honest, I think Provincial is John Samson’s best work to date.
-L 
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pairofmirrors-blog · 13 years
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#1. Bon Iver - Bon Iver 
"Michicant" 
The year 2011 produced a perfect album.
Bon Iver is the artist whose legacy with outlive us all. Years from now, he will be up there with Bob Dylan, Neil Young, and Nick Drake. Bon Iver is the ultimate modern songwriter – he is at once cryptic, passionate, complicated, versatile, and profound.
The most incredible thing of all is that in 2011 Bon Iver resisted the urge to remain Bon Iver. The songs from his 2008 debut For Emma, Forever Ago, in light of this year’s self-titled release, seem infinitely dwarfed. Before 2011, I would classify as quintessential Bon Iver songs like “Skinny Love” and “Re: Stacks”. These songs from For Emma were gritty, guitar-ridden spectacles of a broken heart. They were painful and sometimes even unbearable. Justin Vernon’s sadness on those songs was infectious and overwhelming, but the music itself, while in many ways very creative, was nowhere near this year’s Bon Iver.
Bon Iver is not an album about love – it’s an album about life. That is the biggest difference from 2008’s For Emma. Sometimes Bon Iver is about the nostalgia and the sadness of life, but at the same time it’s about the power that can be drawn from those moments. There are lines on Bon Iver that can be interpreted in a million different ways – “I can see for miles and miles and miles,” for instance, or “and at once I knew, I was not magnificent”. It’s a kind of album that seems enchanted and dreamlike – the way it transitions from movement to stillness, from silence to sound. Every single song on Bon Iver contains an infinite number of layers. Every time you listen to the songs, you feel like you’ve peeled back one more layer, you feel like you’re that much closer to the very heart of Vernon’s voice, and to its meaning.
If I could describe Bon Iver in one sentence it would be that the album is the very manifestation of a living, breathing, human being’ soul. It’s the brain, the heart, and the body combined, within one devastatingly perfect 40-minute package.
-L 
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pairofmirrors-blog · 13 years
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#2. Timber Timbre - Creep On Creeping On
"Bad Ritual"
I haven't shut up about Timber Timbre all year. Three shows, three blog posts, and an absolutely astounding number of plays, Creep On Creepin' On will forever be remembered as the soundtrack of my 2011. I know you aren't surprised. 
One thing I have noticed since falling in love with this album is how much I hear its dark influence finding its way into other things. You can hear that creepiness creeping on along into albums like Watch The Throne (listen to the end of No Church In the Wild and tell me that doesn't sound like a Taylor Kirk influence). Timber Timbre has started something that isn't going to stop. 
Creep On Creepin' On is such an impressively cohesive whole. It is the perfect blend of old familiar and nostalgic sounds yet it is so perfectly new, unique and noteably different. It is full of subtle themes, instrumentally, melodically and lyrically that all fit together so perfectly--flowing in and out of one another, reminding us over and over what Timber Timbre is all about. I have come to seriously adore each and every track on this album so very very much, but it is without a doubt best heard as a whole, as the Timber Timbre experience. 
I don't want to go on and on about this, because we have done that a lot this year. You can read about why we love Timber Timbre here, here or here. 
Creep On Creepin' On has however made me feel a vast spectrum of things this year and the juxtapostition of those feelings is quite striking. I will share a few things that this album has made me feel, which includes but is not limited to fear, comfort, hypnosis, goosepumps, hope, sadness, joy and above all, inspiration. Creep On Creepin' On has become, for me, a ritual in and of itself. 
It's a bad bad ritual, but it calms me down. 
-M
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pairofmirrors-blog · 13 years
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#3. tUnE-yArDs - w h o k i l l 
"My Country" 
You've never heard music that sounds like Tune-Yards before, which in many ways is the reason for Whokill's high placement on this year's countdown. Tune-Yards manages to marry fierce experimental pop with insatiable listenability. Songs like "Bizness" and "Gangsta" are funky and creative to the core. You're never quite sure if what you're listening to is the chorus, bridge, or verse - no such definitions exist in front woman Merrill Garbus' musical universe. And yet, what ends up happening is that the words, guitars, hooks, drums, beats, and whatever else you hear on Whokill, blend and mingle together to create a massive, catchy, 42-minute party anthem. 
Whokill sounds like all the musical genres got together and had a dance party. Parts of Whokill sound like Dirty Projectors, Lauryn Hill, Micachu, Animal Collective, Braids, Erykah Badu, Beyonce, and Lady Gaga. Yet, the biggest achievement of Whokill is not the endless juxtaposition and amalgamation of musical genres - after all, that has been done before - but rather the fact that Garbus has managed to do it in a catchy and listenable way. No longer is experimental pop only for people who like weird music! No longer is experimental pop frowned at at a party! No longer is it somewhat tedious to listen to experimental pop! Tune-Yards put an end to all such pre-conceptions with Whokill, a pop album that is both weird and wonderful, eccentric yet accessible. 
It's the pop sound of the future. 
-L
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pairofmirrors-blog · 13 years
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#4. Daniele Luppi & Danger Mouse - Rome
 "Two Against One" f. Jack White 
When you heard the words "Danger Mouse", "Daniele Luppi", "Jack White", "Norah Jones" and "album" all used in the same sentence, you knew it was took to be good. But Rome turned out to be more than good, it's in fact a pretty incredible.
It sounds like the soundtrack to the most epic movie, but (even though it suggests it is in the title) Rome is simply an epic collaboration project. However, the soundtrack notion is fitting given the imagery that this album invokes for the listener. Rome is a kind of interpersonal imagination project. Your imagination is tempted and teased by so many different places--contemporary and historical, fictional and real. You can picture it accompanying any number of things from a classic Western to a French film, from Cirque de Solei to real gypsies, or for me, some fantasy based place a la Golden Compass or Game of Thrones.
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 The arrangement and instrumentation  of Rome is so powerful and  nostalgic, sweeping from one song to another with seamless cohesion. As an instrumental collection it would be impressive standing alone. The interludes enough are enough to get your attention.  Enter Norah  Jones and Jack White and you have an epic musical narrative. It's the songs that focus on Jack and Norah that entice you to the next level of love for Rome. Songs like "Two Against One", "Black", and "Problem Queen" are these intense sing along highs. They make self contained stories but are nestled so perfectly in the bigger picture, the bigger story.
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In a year of jam bands and collaborations, Rome is the standout. I hope these incredible musicians collaborate again, because the result was one of my favorite musical journeys ever, let alone in 2011.
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-M
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pairofmirrors-blog · 13 years
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#5. Lykke Li - Wounded Rhymes
"Youth Knows No Pain"
It's a great feeling when an artist you really like comes out with a second, even better, even more impressive album. Such is the case with Lykke Li. She is getting better with age.Youth Novels was one of my favourite albums in university, but Wounded Rhymes is full of new insights, danceable tunes, reflective ballads and sing along songs. She did it again, but even better.  Lykke seems to have grown up a lot from Youth Novels, and she says now, "Youth Knows No Pain". 
The success of Lykke Li is really exciting for me. The way Wounded Rhymes seems to be borderline mainstream says a lot to me about where music is headed. It seems the indie, the intelligent, the innovative, is on the up and up. Good music is finally starting to get the attention and ticket sales they deserve. It's so refreshing to see a talented pop singer like Lykke selling out huge venues in Toronto and everywhere else. She is clever, talented, beautiful, and writes undeniably good songs. When you're listening to Wounded Rhymes there is definitely no denying that music can be catchy and intelligent at the same time. She's the mastermind behind these fantastic pop tunes.  Its this level of accessibility and the stomp along sing along quality of Lykke Li's engaging songwriter that makes her the reigning indie queen in my books. And right along side those catchy singalong songs are gentle, sad, pretty and quiet ones too. 
I admire the way Lykke writes from this poignant perspective of being a smart and beautiful woman. It's so brutally and beautifully honest. Songs like Rich Kid Blues and Get Some are both provocative and catchy, without seeming in the least bit over the top. I think she is an inspiring woman in the music scene and is going places even bigger than she's been in 2011. 
L and I often have trouble agreeing on which albums deserve which spots on our countdowns, but since Wounded Rhymes came out we both knew it held a special place both in our hearts and on the countdown. We've enjoyed this album together and apart, recorded and live. It was an obvious choice from the get go. 
-M
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pairofmirrors-blog · 13 years
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#6. Destroyer - Kaputt
"Chinatown" 
Kaputt is a weird little album. First of all, you will never find cohesive, non-nonsensical lyricism on Kaputt. Every line uttered by Dan Bejar on Kaputt seems to emerge from the dark and mysterious depths of his brain. It's a free association game at its finest. Lines like "I wrote a song for America, they told me it was clever," followed by "Jessica's gone on vacation on the dark side of town forever" from "Song For America" make you just sit and wonder where on earth that came from. Another good line is from "Chinatown": "The wind and the rain: to your detriment you try to explain / The government swallowed up in the squall / I can't walk away, at all - in Chinatown". 
On top of the above-mentioned lyrical free-for-all comes a side of musical accompaniment that is decidedly stuck in the eighties. And not just eighties in general, but the cheesiest of eighties. Suave smooth-jazzy soprano saxes and clarinets accompany Bejar's voice on "Chinaown" and "Downtown." Light percussions and snazzy synths dominate "Savage Night at the Opera". Easy listening flutes provide the melody for "Suicide Demo for Kara Walker." In the words of my ever-wise boyfriend: "They kind of sound like Pet Shop Boys." 
On paper, Kaputt as an album should not add up to much. And yet the eighties-ness of the music, the whimsical subject matter, and the nonchalance of Bejar's voice as well as his fake British accent all combine to make a brilliantly light album, one which borders on ironic, sarcastic, and, well, insane. 
-L
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pairofmirrors-blog · 13 years
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#7. St. Vincent - Strange Mercy
  "I I I I I Don't Want to Be a Cheerleader No More"
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Annie Clarke has struck this perfect balance between ladylike and completely badass. She is this stunning, delicate, feminine specimen whose guitar skills are likely the envy of anyone whose ever seen her play one. It is women like Annie Clark that make Lana Del Rey look bad. Furthermore, she's not afraid to speak her mind. I have been a St. Vincent fan since Actor came out in 2009, and I was eager to hear what Annie was going to come up with next. "Surgeon" was released while I was travelling in Europe this summer and I specifically remember sitting on the stone steps, stealing a wifi signal, and then lying down to listen to the track as soon as I could. I was impressed from that first listen, and the rest of Strange Mercy has been no disappointment. 
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St. Vincent has always had a unique and engaging sound, but Strange Mercy really took that sound to new heights. There are so many weird but catchy riffs, and lyrical melodies on this album, intertwined gracefully with very alternative effects and edgy hard-hitting lines. For example,
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I spent the summer on my back -Surgeon
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I make a living telling people what they want to hear
It's not a killing, but it's enough to keep the cobwebs clear  -Champagne Year
Bodies, can't you see what everybody want's from you?
If you could wan't that too, then you'd be happy  -Cruel
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Oh America can I owe you one - Year of the Tiger
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No kisses no real names no kisses no real names
Who will hear hear your word ring ring phone send you home
find my heels heal my hurt white, white shirt back to work  -Chloe in the Afternoon
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That combination of catchy and enticing with weird and unexpected make for a dynamic and delightful album. Over and over I play it and over and over I fall in love with the entity that is St. Vincent. 
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I find Strange Mercy to be an empowering album. It spoke to me on so many levels. It's an album full of #whitegirlproblems , but these are actually thoughtful, profound, and powerful ones. Annie exposes these harsh realities in the most dreamy way. Again, that contrast, soft and hard, delicate and tough. 
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In an interview on Q with Jian Gomeshi, Annie talked about writing this album in a unique kind of isolation. Staying in a hotel in a city where she knew no one, she would spend 12 hours a day in a silent studio, writing what was to become Strange Mercy. Left alone with her thoughts she wrote songs like "Surgeon" where she begs "best finest surgeon, come cut me open." She went on to say in her Q interview that perhaps we all have that one fatal flaw we'd love for a surgeon to come and cut out of us. I think you can really hear how much solitude and reflection and hard work went into this album and it impresses with every listen. It isn't predictable, but it sticks. Annie sings of The Year of the Tiger, but I think I will remember this year as the year of St. Vincent. 
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-M
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pairofmirrors-blog · 13 years
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#8. M83 - Hurry Up, We're Dreaming
"Reunion" 
There is a special category of albums that always seems to weasel their way into listeners’ hearts. They are the albums that seek to sound like life itself. They attempt to capture the inaudible joy of blood flowing through your veins, air pumping through your lungs, and neurons firing in your brain. M83’s Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming is exactly that kind of album.
I can’t say it any other way – listening to Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming, gives me this amazing natural high. The album is hugely atmospheric. You can walk down the street listening to it and you’ll be convinced you’re listening to the soundtrack of your own life. A song like “Intro” conjures images of a beginning of a great adventure. “Midnight City” and “This Bright Flash” capture the feeling of the most amazing night in the world, in the most amazing place, with the most amazing friends. “Soon My Friend” is just about that – missing an incredible person, but knowing that you will be reunited with them soon. “Wait” is a gentle little song, about sad endings, but new beginnings.
And “Reunion”, the standout track of the album, is probably the most magnificent proclamation of undying, earth-shattering love that I have heard in years:
You came out of nowhere, stealing my heart and brain.
Flaming my every cell. You make me feel myself.
Oh oh oh oh oh oh! Will you stay in this land forever?
Across the time and space, a never-ending dance.
A blooming and a trance. You make me feel my soul.
There's no more loneliness, only sparkles and sweat.
There's no more single fate. You make me feel myself. 
Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming is a laugh-to, cry-to, walk-down-the-street-to, make-love-to, have-an-epiphany-to, and just love-your-life-to album. It’s stunning, magnificent, and real. It’s perfect.
-L
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pairofmirrors-blog · 13 years
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#9. Laura Marling - A Creature I Don't Know
"I Was Just A Card"
Laura Marling has made me think harder than any other musician this year. I have to listen to her so carefully, but I get something new out of every listen. Her songs are so sophisticated and discerning. I said it before but I have to say it again, Laura Marling seems incredibly wise beyond her years. A Creature I Don't Know is my poetry album of 2011, for true listening and digestion. What's even better is how the album isn't limited to that poetic folk sound. It has these incredible and dynamic shifts between warm and harsh, bright and dark. Movement filled, percussive banjos and strumming between astonishingly quiet and peaceful moments. It is a roller coaster ride of a folk album. The ups and downs are dictated by a variety of things, be it number of instruments, the incredible range of Marling's voice, the cheerful highs contrasted against sorrowful, heart wrenching lows. 
 I can't help but think that Laura Marling represents some of the most intelligent, thoughtful, reflective song writing that this year had to offer. Her songs are so honest and immediate but complex at the same time. I have to say again that she is only 21, and so incredibly talented its just mind blowing. Lyrics, vocals, guitar playing, she is a goddess of folk. I can't even imagine what this woman is going to accomplish next. 
Let's just say three people on my Christmas list are getting this album, and I know they won't be disappointed. 
Here are some of my favourite lyrics from the album:
I was just a card, caught up in the stars, looking down to mars
you know, you know, he knows, he knows
something about me that i don't want him to know  -I Was Just A Card
He longs for the answers, as all of us must
He longs for the woman who will conquer his lust
He screams in the night, I scream in the day
We weep int he evening and lie naked and pray. -Night After Night
My friends, my dear friends, and lovers, oh my lovers
I'd leave you for them, they got a hand on my back   -My Friends
All I want for Christmas are tickets to Europe to see her play with Timber Timbre. Too bad I definitely won't get it. Sigh. 
-M
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pairofmirrors-blog · 13 years
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#10. Radiohead - The King of Limbs
"Lotus Flower"
The King of Limbs is a kind of album that gets better with every week that goes by. In January, when King of Limbs came out, I was intrigued by the album. By the summer, I was hooked. Now, I’m in love.  
The King of Limbs is great because, on pretty much every song, you hear elements of the kind of musical song-crafting which made Radiohead such a widely renowned band in the first place. The runny piano that opens “Bloom” and closes the album on “Separator” is one example. The piano melody is sporadic, cryptic, and intense – just like The King of Limbs, and just like Radiohead. But at the same time, the fact that the album opens and closes with the same riff implies that there is meaning and purpose to that little piano. And that’s the great thing about Radiohead – nothing is ever random, even if it appears so. Radiohead is the great philosopher-band of our time. 
It is also impossible to talk about The King of Limbs and not talk about “Lotus Flower”, as well as its truly magnificent video. On “Lotus Flower” Thom Yorke shows how much of a virtuoso-mastermind he really is. The song itself joins the ranks of all-time best Radiohead songs, up there with “Karma Police” and “Idioteque”. And then there’s the video - the way Thom moves to the beat of his own music, the way he mouths his own words, really the way he becomes one with his music is simply stunning. 
Overall, The King of Limbs is a classic album. It may not be Radiohead’s best album ever, but that’s an incredibly high mark to clear. Rather, The King of Limbs is as good as any album that came out in 2011, and definitely better than most. 
-L
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pairofmirrors-blog · 13 years
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#11. The Kills - Blood Pressures
"DNA"
The Kills are just so cool. All of their grungy, swagger filled blues rock has been, and Blood Pressures is no exception. Better than just being cool, it is contagiously so. It's that album that makes me straighten up, pout a little more, and generally feel significantly more badass when I'm walking down the street. The album is infectiously sexy. And what more can you ask for than for an album that is so cool that it makes you feel cool too? 
Alison & Jamie are quite obviously two of the coolest people… well, ever. You can hear it in their songs, (no need to talk about how they hang out with Jack White and Kate Moss) but you can see it best when you watch them on stage. We, the ladies of POM, got to see them do their thing at the Sound Academy earlier in the year and it confirmed all our opinions about these two rock icons. They are badass, their music is badass, you want them, and you want to be them.
This album, like the two before it, will continue to have serious playtime long after 2011 gets rung out. We both knew since it first became streamable in March, that Blood Pressures was definitely going to have a spot on Pair of Mirrors Top 20 of 2011. We love them. I've listened to this album three times today while preparing to write about it, and now I feel sexy and invincible. I prescribe a good dose of Blood Pressures to you too. 
-M
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#12. Girls – Father, Son, Holy Ghost
“Vomit"
The story of Christopher Owens, the man behind Girls, is not a usual one. Growing up as a member of Children of God cult, Owens was not allowed to listen to any music. Because of this, Owens says that his music is “an overflow of expression.”
That statement definitely applied to Girls’ first LP, Album, which came out in 2009. Songs like “Lust for Life”, “Big Bad Motherfucker”, and “Hellhole Ratrace” were classic ballads in form but not in substance. On Album, Owens tested his listeners’ boundaries through exploring themes like god, homosexuality, human psychology, and people’s relationships with one another. The juxtaposition of such themes with ballad-style composition was very effective – the whole album was an ironic, thought-provoking statement.
Girls’ second album, named Father, Son, Holy Ghost builds on the themes from Album. But at the same time, Father is so good it leaves the very excellent Album in the dust. It is incredible how much more prolific and creative Owens has become in his music. To begin with, the new album is much more musically full than its predecessor. On top of the familiar and easy electric guitar chords, Owens has added percussion, bass, and many more guitars. At times, like during “Die” and “Vomit,” Girls sound more like early Smashing Pumpkins or even Nirvana. At other times, Girls draw on almost cheesy alt-rock and gospel influences. The hooks and sha-la-las in “Honey Bunny” and “Magic” are almost juvenile; they are reminiscent of the breezy radio soft-rock enjoyed in junior high. At other times still, like during “Forgiveness”, the formula is simple: it’s Owens, an acoustic, and not much more.  
What permeates through the entire album is the heaviness, darkness, and tension which Owens is able to create through what seems like any musical medium. And yet this tension is often competing with themes of love, hope, and forgiveness.  “Vomit” is the standout track in this regard. The song is reportedly inspired by Proverbs 26:11: “As a dog returns to its vomit, so a fool repeats his foolishness.” Throughout almost the whole song, Owens sings just three short lines:  
Nights I spent alone,
I spent ‘em running around looking for you, baby…
Looking for love.
The tension builds as Owens repeats those lines, and then suddenly, with about a minute to go, there is light and rapture and the whole mood of the song just changes. Owens begins singing a single phrase – “Come into my heart”. A gospel singer joins in the background. There is freedom; a burden lifted. How did this song appear daunting only minutes ago? But then you think about it – you really think about it – and suddenly you get the joke. At the end, is Owens trying to say that he finally broke out of the fool’s cycle? Or is he saying that, like a dog, now and forever, even when he thinks he won’t have to, even when he thinks he’s cured, he will always come back for more?
-L 
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