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Album review
LAURA VEIRS - YEAR OF METEORS
"Building on the success of her previous work, YEAR
OF METEORS is a record that finds Laura Veirs stretching
her musical vision further than before, but without losing that
intimate magic that makes her songs so enchanting. A warm and inviting
album, YEAR OF METEORS finds Laura Veirs continuing
to charm and enchant on a record that rocks as well as mesmerises.
"
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Following up last years mesmerising
CARBON GLACIER, Laura Veirs is back with another
record to enchant and delight. YEAR OF METEORS
sees the Seattle based singer/songwriter dishing out more
tales of the strange and the beautiful, weaving her plaintive
vocals around subjects from Lake Swimming to Spelunking. CARBON
GLACIER was an album that for most people came out
of nowhere, a gently breathtaking blend of acoustic folk and
subdued beats - a million miles from the dull warblings of
Dido and David Gray. With songs like THE CLOUD ROOM
and ICEBOUND STREAM, Veirs was greeted with
critical acclaim and the adoration of all who heard her and
she rightly rode the higher end of many end of year polls.
YEAR OF METEORS is a more fleshed out and
musically rich affair, backed by a full band the songs here
are given extra layers of sound and new textures. Faintly
grunge guitars rub shoulders with rich keyboard sounds, the
results of a songwriter pushing what she does to that next
sonic level.
This is a record though, that displays its changes subtly
- still at heart an intimate and mesmerising experience and
one that presents Laura Veirs as an acoustic singer/songwriter
first and foremost, her folk tinged indie-rock gently backed
up by the new band structure. Its on a song like SECRET
SOMEONES that you feel the benefits the most, a warm
hammond organ hums away in the background as sinewy guitar
lines weave their way around the skittery drum beats. GALAXIES
finds distorted power chords brushing up against a spidery
synth riff, a sound akin to Ladytron discovering Bob Dylan
and Joni Mitchell.
A gentler acoustic affair, MAGNETIZED is
Veirs and her acoustic guitar - singing plaintive melodies
over intricately fingerpicked guitar lines, using that hypnotically
mesmerising voice to beautiful and sublime effect. Fuelled
by a mournful viola riff, PARISIAN DREAM
sounds like The Velvet Underground fronted by Joni Mitchell
whilst the classic Californian rock vibes of COOL
WATER sounds like it could have come straight from
Laurel Canyon in the early seventies, all languid organ riffs,
warm guitar lines and chilled out melodies that bring forward
images of Neil Young and The Grateful Dead jamming away. Elsewhere
you're treated to the gentle acoustic folk of THROUGH
THE GLOW and SPELUNKING, the messier
dissonance of BLACK GOLD BLUES and the trip-hop
meets glacial folk of album closer LAKE SWIMMING.
Building on the success of her previous work, YEAR
OF METEORS is a record that finds Laura Veirs stretching
her musical vision further than before, but without losing
that intimate magic that makes her songs so enchanting. A
warm and inviting album, YEAR OF METEORS
finds Laura Veirs continuing to charm and enchant on a record
that rocks as well as mesmerises.
Late August, 2005 saw the worldwide release of Year of Meteors
and the record has been attracting some great reviews in publications
such as Uncut, Mojo, NME, Q, the New York Times, Pitchfork,
Entertainment Weekly, Spin.com, the Independent (UK) and many
others.
Last year, Nonesuch released Laura Veirs’ Carbon Glacier,
her label debut, on August 24, 2004. The New York Times described
Veirs’ songs “as poems: they’re careful,
word-conscious, narrative, neither foggy nor overwritten,
and tend to give you a take on regular life experience that
you don’t quite expect.” Time Out New York concurred,
saying “Veirs' talent borders on the transcendent.”
The album also received extraordinary praise in the U.K.,
where it was released in February 2004 on Bella Union Records.
The Independent called Carbon Glacier the “most enthralling
album of the year thus far,” adding “it has the
air of an instant classic, a benchmark by which future Americana
releases will be judged.” Mojo called the record “incantatory,
contemplative, literate,” while Uncut, in a five-star
lead review, called Carbon Glacier Veirs’ “first
masterpiece…the unmistakable sound of a songwriter hitting
her stride, pouring herself into each syllable.”
Seattle-based singer-songwriter Laura Veirs calls her 2005
Nonesuch release Year of Meteors “a road record.”
“It doesn’t sound like one,” she says, “but
it is.”
Veirs had spent most of 2004 touring in support of the hauntingly
beautiful Carbon Glacier, her breakthrough effort and Nonesuch
debut. She started out in Europe, where she was greeted with
overwhelming critical praise and sold-out houses. Then Veirs
worked her way around the States, where she was still just
being discovered (though the reviews were also often superlative).
The experience was at times heady, other times gruelling,
and she incorporated it into her new songs. However, given
Veirs’ vividly descriptive yet dream-like lyrics, you
won’t learn anything about her actual itinerary. Year
of Meteors is no ordinary travelogue, but it will definitely
take you on a remarkable journey.
“All the songs are about transportation, motion,”
Veirs explains. “If you listen to the words, there’s
always some movement happening, whether it’s greyhounds
running down a mountainside as mud flows or a person flying
off into the sun or someone lurking around the bottom of the
sea. I think that’s because I was in motion so much
of the year. Somehow I knew that all the traveling would come
into the songs, but I wanted to remain focused on the bigger
things, not just life on the road, so that’s why there
are no direct references to that.”
There are, she hastens to add, “love songs related to
that experience, like the struggles of being away from home
and your partner. Or having my band and the different relationships
I have formulated, many of them very close because of the
intense circumstances of touring. So it’s a relationship
record too.”
And, finally, it’s a band record: a fertile collaboration
between Veirs and her studio band, the Tortured Souls (who
often play live with her)—Steve Moore (piano, organs),
Karl Blau (bass, guitar, vocals), and producer Tucker Martine
(drums, percussion, treatments). Viola player Eyvind Kang,
another longtime associate, also sat in. As Veirs explains,
“When we talked about making the album, we decided to
record a lot of these songs as a band first, then do some
more of the solo type of songs. It had always been the opposite
before, I would go in and record the more quiet guitar parts
and sing. This time, half of the record or more are tracks
that we did live as a band first. Then we went in and recorded
the quieter ones. We approached this from the beginning more
as a band album and it really turned out that way.”
While the songs themselves are linear in structure, the arrangements
take off in unexpected, subtly pop-oriented directions. There’s
a handclap-filled call and response on “Rialto,”
which could be a reverie about a stopover in Venice, and an
almost-sing-along chorus on “Secret Someones,”
a lilting track that belies Veirs’ reputation as a purveyor
of only chilly moods. Lovely countrified strings glide through
“Parisian Dream,” while bursts of grungy guitars
interrupt “Black Gold Blues.”
A memorable little synthesizer squeal repeated throughout
“Galaxies” seems completely off-hand, but was
actually a major Rube Goldberg sort of undertaking. As Veirs
explains: “It took three of us. I hit the key, then
Steve brought the volume up and down, and then Karl did the
modulator thing. Karl was trying to do it by himself but it
was too much for one person to handle. It’s funny that
the three of us needed to be there to make that work. In fact,
you can see what we did on our website under the ‘videos’
section. Tucker was making videos with a little digital camera
during the sessions so you can see that as it happened.”
Bella Union label head (and former Cocteau Twin) Simon Raymonde
decided to release 2003’s Troubled by the Fire after
Veirs played at South By Southwest in Austin, TX. Her 2003
performance there prompted New York Times critic Jon Pareles
to name Veirs one of the top three finds of the event. Nic
Harcourt of KCRW in Los Angeles featured tracks from the disc
on “Morning Becomes Eclectic”; No Depression also
gave it a rave, but the real buzz started overseas, where
Veirs’ stark and surreal take on Americana found a rapt
audience. The NME declared, “Laura Veirs fashions a
timeless strand of neo-folk and post-country…there’s
a spine-tingling magic to these short stories.”
Troubled by the Fire was not officially Veirs’ debut,
however; she had self-released two albums, The Triumphs and
Travails of Orphan Mae (2001) and Laura Veirs (1999) that
had garnered her local press and radio attention. John Richards
of Seattle radio station KEXP called Orphan Mae “a gorgeous
album of dark indie-folk rooted in traditional balladry…with
some exciting experimental effects.” Her earlier self-titled
disc was as raw as she would ever be; it was recorded in three
hours with just voice and guitar.
Carbon Glacier, named after “a beautiful, dirty black
and white glacier on the northern slopes of Mount Rainier,”
elevated Veirs further. It recalled the work of various artists—Leonard
Cohen, Laurie Anderson, Beth Orton, even Four Tet—while
sounding like nothing but itself. Veirs had composed the austere,
mesmerizing tracks in the winter of 2003 and quickly recorded
them in twelve days with the Tortured Souls and assorted friends.
European audiences in particular were enthralled with Veirs’
stirring, quasi-mystical evocation of the natural elements
of her Pacific Northwest home. Here was an America they could
recognize and still embrace. “Taking the mythically
proportioned American wilderness as giant metaphor,”
Uncut wrote, “Veirs explores unpredictability, cyclical
rebirth and the tortuous scramble for artistic perfection
via gently exquisite songs both dark and luminous.”
Veirs, who was raised in Colorado Springs, had studied geology
(along with Mandarin Chinese) as a college student in rural
Minnesota, and had always been fascinated with nature. As
a youth, she was more involved in sports and outdoor activities
than music, but the interest was there, waiting to surface,
like an object in one of her gravity-defying lyrics. And when
it did, the circumstances could have come from a scenario
for one of her songs. Veirs was on a collegiate geological
expedition in the desert of Northwest China when she had an
epiphany, realizing that her future would be in singing, writing,
and playing the guitar. The scientist still comes through
in her work, though—lending sharp, precise edges to
otherwise impressionistic lyrics.
“I love when I can write a lyric that brings a clear
image to mind,” Veirs says. “That’s kind
of what I’m striving for. This album has a lot of stuff
from the sky—stars, meteors, galaxies—and a lot
of stuff from the sea: birds floating in the air or on water,
eels and sea grass at the bottom of the sea…For some
reason, those things don’t sound scientific and removed
to me; they sound vivacious and raw and pure and essential
to life. Somehow I hope I can gather my appreciation for those
things and translate that through myself, through my songs,
keeping a reference to the human aspect, the human experience.”
—Michael Hill
::
Line Up :: Discography :: Merchandise :: Further Listening
:: Web Links ::
| Laura Veirs>vocals/guitar/keyboards Steve Moore>piano/organs/keyboards Karl Blau>bass/guitar/vocals/keyboards Tucker Martine>drums/beats/percussion Eyvind Kang>viola Keith Lowe>upright bass
TROUBLED BY FIRE (2003>Bella Union) CARBON GLACIER (2004>Bella Union) YEAR OF METEORS (2005>Nonesuch)
LINKS
Review date: November 2005
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