rymenhild: Manuscript page from British Library MS Harley 913 (Default)
[personal profile] rymenhild
Apologies for the prolongued hiatus, people. I haven't had much interesting to say. Today, though, I have new music to gush about.

The first time I listened to "Emily", the first 12-minute song on Joanna Newsom's new album Ys, I was really confused. I couldn't guess where Newsom's voice (which everyone compares to Bjork, but I'm sure I hear something in it that reminds me of the best early jazz musicians) was going to swoop next, or when and why she and the lush orchestra behind her were going to dance off in separate directions. By the tenth or eleventh minute of the song, I gave it grudging approval.

How can I describe the second listen? I felt like Mary Lennox, standing in the drab walkway and then pushing open the door to the secret garden, in a sudden blaze of sunlight on wild roses. Yes, that's a twee and overly cheesy analogy, but Newsom is always just on the near end of twee and overly cheesy herself. That is, unless she's gone all the way through and come out the other side.

The thing about writing a twelve-minute song, with lyrics that may just be the richest and most besotted with language I've ever heard set to music*, is that Newsom doesn't have to resolve her thoughts right away. Newsom can muse slowly, focusing on small details of what she sees ("the bones of the birches, and the spires of the churches, jutting out from the shadows; / the yoke, and the axe, and the old smokestacks, and the bale, and the barrow") and what she remembers ("Anyhow, I sat by your side, by the water / You taught me the names of the stars overhead, that I wrote down in my ledger"). She can raise tension almost unnoticeably, so that one doesn't recognize the bitterness of "Let us go! Though we know it's a hopeless endeavor / The ties that bind, they are barbed and spined, and hold us close forever" until the fourth listen. After all this, the song's final redemptive move comes as a gift, more valuable and meaningful for the ten minutes of journey.

We could stand for a century,
staring,
with our heads cocked,
in the broad daylight, at this thing:

Joy,
Landlocked in bodies that don't keep--
dumbstruck with the sweetness of being
till we don't be.


*And I listen to Leonard Cohen quite a lot.

Date: 2006-11-20 04:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] muchabstracted.livejournal.com
Having just borrowed Kris Delmhorst's Strange Conversations, and vaguely thinking that I want to buy something by Vienna Teng (after I know her songs well enough to know which one) and Hazmat Modine's album... A review like this still makes me want to put it on my amazon.com wishlist right away.

Date: 2006-11-20 07:13 am (UTC)
ext_27060: Sumer is icomen in; llude sing cucu! (Default)
From: [identity profile] rymenhild.livejournal.com
My favorite of Vienna Teng's songs are split more or less evenly between Warm Strangers and Waking Hour. WS has more of my favorites, but WH includes my absolute favorite. I don't like Dreaming Through the Noise, Teng's most recent CD, nearly as much as its predecessors.

Date: 2006-11-20 10:54 am (UTC)
ext_13979: (Anne Bonney)
From: [identity profile] ajodasso.livejournal.com
...someone else was talking about her last night. Just as incoherently/admiringly as you. And I'd never heard of her before, ever.

I've got to get this.

Date: 2006-11-20 03:34 pm (UTC)
batyatoon: (Default)
From: [personal profile] batyatoon
... so are you going to upload any samples of this new muse?

Date: 2006-11-20 07:43 pm (UTC)
ext_27060: Sumer is icomen in; llude sing cucu! (Default)
From: [identity profile] rymenhild.livejournal.com
I see that you already have gotten Ys. Yay. I thought you'd love it.

Profile

rymenhild: Manuscript page from British Library MS Harley 913 (Default)
rymenhild

January 2022

S M T W T F S
      1
2345678
91011121314 15
16171819202122
23242526272829
3031     

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Apr. 15th, 2026 10:02 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios