Metals (Arts&Crafts) by Feist is one of the most interesting releases of 2011. It’s an album that reveals a maturing artist with a willingness to take uncompromising risks.
Metals starts with the heavy
beat of a drum kit who’s heart is alive and well in Feist's world,
as we're carried into the finer points of a relationship on the
opening cut, "The Bad In Each Other." It's a song in 6/8
that immediately grabs your attention because of its pulse and a horn
section supplemented by a string quartet. It's a big sound because
it's a big album that wants to be noticed.
Feist |
This is a very rough album, too, and it isn't all lush alternative rock. "A Commotion" kicks with
its raw strings cranking out the time as aggressively as possible.
It's a heavy track with its thundering drums banging out a tribal
rhythm that builds to its cold finish. The song reminds me of what Kate
Bush was trying to accomplish on her song "Sat in Your Lap"
which was her answer to all the Dream Pop tracks that came before it.
As humans we need to continually acknowledge our tribal origins and
our heathen-like responses. In fact, considering the barren cover
that looks like an apocalyptic world with its starkness and striped
down tree conveniently shaped as the letter F, clearly Feist is only
interested in the pursuit of the most basic human needs. And she's
either trying to understand if she's connected to the human race, or
if the human race is connected at all to one another in the 21st
Century, where the technological achievements have done more to separate
our species than bring us together.
It's been four years since the release
of The Reminder and the wave of success that followed. Perhaps
Feist is reacting to all the fuss and publicity and wants to avoid it
all on Metals. She has stated that she took a leave of absence
from music for a year before getting back into songwriting. But
perhaps it was a post-traumatic stress reaction to all the attention.
Remember, she's an artist who almost lost her ability to sing in the
first place before cloistering herself in a room and writing the songs
that made up The Reminder. Perhaps I'm reading too much into
this, but I like to think that serious artists like her should have their work
considered in their proper context; either in context to their previous work ,or
in the context of their life and times. In Feist’s case, it’s an
easy connection for us to make.
The blues is philosophically present on
Metals, but no more obvious in the opening chords to
"Anti-Pioneer,” a rather spare recording with a deliberately
slow tempo echoing the front porch lament of the South, but with a
California twist and heavy string arrangement. To me, Feist is a
vocalist specifically interested in creating a sound and presentation
that's geared to the track itself, as if each song is painted on a
fresh pallet, rather than using many colours on the same pallet.
Metals does not have many colours; mostly shades of grey but
it's her use of the musical brush that makes it a success. Rather
than appeal to fans of The Reminder who discovered a slightly
quirky pop song stylist, Metals is a whole new creation whose
thread is her unique voice.
Recorded in Big Sur, California, Metals
is an album that doesn't really echo any geographic location in my
opinion, but it does have a free spirit about it that has provided
Feist and producers Chilly Gonzales and Mocky with an opportunity to
experiment. It's an album that rewards you on repeated listening
simply for the more intimate cuts such as "Comfort Me" and
"Cicadas and Gulls." These are quiet, mood pieces carefully
rendered with grace and beauty in their sparseness. The album
concludes with the equally charming "Get it Wrong Get it Right,"
a kind of wink of the eye from the artist who's muse maybe is saying
"Don't be afraid of balancing one's career with the demands of
the music business."
Joni Mitchell often spoke about her
recordings as individual, self-contained works. For Feist, who I
think philosophically agrees with Mitchell's notion, Metals is
as unique as The Reminder and Let It Die (2004), each
expressing a different aspect of the singer. This newest work is an
important musical statement from a very creative artist who appears
to have fully regained her muse and created a record that has
captures a maturing artist moving into the future.
– John Corcelli is a musician, writer
and broadcaster. He was the producer and sound designer on Kevin Courrier’s
upcoming radio documentary, Dream Time: Perth County
Conspiracy…Does Not Exist,
that will be broadcast on CBC Radio’s Inside The Music
on October 16th.
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