Feist - MetalsI've been smitten with Feist for almost 10 years at this point. I loved the tracks she sung on with Broken Social Scene, before knowing she was a solo musician in her own right. I loved "Let It Die" instantly, despite sounding unlike anything else I was listening to at the time (or any time before then). "The Reminder" has this timeless quality about it for me. I've written in the past that the record is one of those few records I have that I can put on when nothing else sounds good to me. It's in the same vein of other "lite" pop records that are nevertheless endlessly entertaining to me: "Graceland", "Abandoned Luncheonette" and "Rumours". Against cred (and sounding like my mom), these are records that I go back to time and again, and I'm not ashamed to put Feist in that category.
The strained yet soft voice, the interesting arrangements, the willingness to criss-cross genre lines without sacrificing the root of her songs, she's just one of my favorite artists working and it means all the more when I continually try to get into other modern female vocalists or "chanteuses" and very rarely find any I can last more than a few songs with.
I'm not going to deny that her music is perfectly suited for commercials (as it obviously has been - which more or less led to her presenting at the Grammys with Snoop Dogg years ago in a totally surreal moment), I'm not going to deny that her music is something you can put on quietly at conservative social gatherings and use as aural wallpaper. It's perfect for that too. But listening to Feist, and especially listening to "Metals", you find that her records work best while listening alone, really taking the songs in.
Many of Feist's songs have these undeniable hooks, so going into "Metals" I expected to be immediately blown away. But after a couple listens I was sorely disappointed with the record. I took a couple weeks off from listening to it, have since listened to it endlessly this week and feel this:
This might very well be Feist's strongest record.
It's certainly her most personal. It's her most stripped down, and it is probably the most cohesive. I won't go out and say this is her "artistic statement" or anything, because that slights her other work, but this record is really strong and in the future will be one in which we look at her as a singer/songwriter and remember her by.
"The Bad In Each Other" is a fantastic opener, heavy drum percussion, male/female harmonies, horns and strings. It's the kind of thing that Beck was trying to do with Charlotte Gainsbourg's last album, but wasn't able to pull off. It's an ambitious opening and the close of the track is one of my favorite things in music all year. "Graveyard" is a chilling track with a repeated line that will be stuck in your head for days. "How Come You Never Go There" is the closest thing to a single and a perfect choice for the radio. Yeah, it's probably being played on your local adult contemporary station right now, but I doubt there's anything else on that frequency that sounds like it - distorted guitar and all. "A Commotion" has this jarring male shouted chorus that sticks out from the pack but the production and build in the track gives it this feeling of a lost Spoon track. "Bittersweet Melodies" has some corny bird-referencing lyrics, but when Feist sings it - you just believe in what she's singing and the beauty of the track continues to shine through.
Look, I realize I gush when I review Feist records, but I think they're complete statements. They seem effortless, without sounding saccharine and Norah Jones-ey. You might still be hesitant to like Feist or find that it's too soft for your tastes, but I feel bad for you. With "Metals", she's cemented herself as one of the few modern musicians that I can't do without.
In Summary: I love this fucking record