[dream-pop] (2024) Jackie West - Close to the Mystery [FLAC] [Dar...
- Category Music
- Type Lossless
- Language English
- Total size 271.4 MB
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  Jackie West â Close to the Mystery (2024)    Â
Review:
âIt isnât hard to say itâs the end of the world,â Jackie West sings at the top of âEnd of the Worldâ, the first song on her debut album, Close to the Mystery. âAll dreams you made real then / Now exist somewhere in the world.â This kind of ethereal, enveloping proclamation is typical of the 12 utterly gorgeous songs that make up a record that almost seems too mature, too accomplished, and too worldly for someone stepping into the spotlight with their first full-length release. Westâs songs occupy a profoundly satisfying place where the songs sound like instant classics and are difficult to pin down stylistically â something of a ballad-heavy netherworld where jazz, folk, soul, and pop coexist without crowding each other out. Typical of the artists on the Brooklyn-based Ruination record label, West possesses a unique sound that is equally adept in a number of different musical environments. Close to the Mystery was produced by multi-instrumentalist Sarah Pedinotti (Lip Talk, Kalbells) and features adept instrumentation by the likes of Shahzad Ismaily, guitarist Adam Brisbin (Buck Meek, Cassandra Jenkins), Nico Osborne (Nicomo), and Katy Pinke (whose self-titled debut album was released on Ruination last month). West, who wrote all the albumâs songs, takes the listener on a multifaceted journey that begins with the sumptuous, unmoored âEnd of the Worldâ, accompanied mainly by acoustic guitar and dotted with understated strings. The tremolo-treated electric guitar that runs through âDifferencesâ gives the song the feel of a midcentury soul ballad or perhaps a country waltz filtered through Jenny Lewis and the Watson Twins. âAnd when the night will howl at your moon,â she sings to a lover in the ashes of a breakup, âI will stare right through the silk of your face / Let you know you wonât be alone.â Jackie Westâs vocals and the way theyâre recorded sound like she may be the reincarnation of classic vocalists like Peggy Lee or a new generationâs Hope Sandoval.
But while the songs certainly retain an air of classic songwriting and performances, there are light contemporary touches, as if the listener is being gently nudged into a modern world. The distorted guitar licks that rise up out of the warm ballad âHave the Timeâ mesh oddly but beautifully with Westâs vocals, angelic harmonies, and shimmering keyboards. Thereâs a sense of dreamy unease on âRuinsâ, which features an off-kilter drum beat, spikes of atonal guitar, and psychedelic keyboard runs â but none of this ever seems to overtake the songs. The weirdness usually only simmers a bit, occasionally bubbling up to the surface. The country feeling of many of the songs is never of a twangy, upbeat nature. Itâs too subdued and married to a jazz-standard feel â even the less elaborately arranged songs, like gentle, swaying âOliviaâ, bring to mind inspired, creative genre exercises like the Cowboy Junkiesâ Trinity Sessions (despite or perhaps because of the swell of occasional retro synth swells). But West also employs arrangements that subtly give way to an indescribable complexity that sneak up on you. âSnow Amplifiedâ begins quietly and gently, as West croons, âSnow on the ground / Lay by your side / The mighty sky / Your geranium eyeâ against the insistent strum of electric guitar before the song slides into a gauzy shoegaze episode, which comes off more as delightfully inevitable than off-putting. âHow they all want us to be,â Jackie West sings on Close to the Mysteryâs final song, âWho Caresâ. âLost in the wars of yesterday / Follow no course so to see / The ground turning from tame to free.â Thereâs an irresistible low-key soul feel to the song, but itâs given a classic, reverb-heavy makeover, as if Lana Del Rey time-traveled to a 1950s Manhattan studio. That kind of stylistic zig-zagging is all over this stunning debut album, but Jackie West and the incredible musicians backing her have formed it all into a consistent, coherent collection that is so seamlessly enjoyable, itâs as if a new genre has been invented â one that transcends generations. â PopMatters
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Track List:
01 - End of the World
02 - Differences
03 - Dreamscape
04 - Have the Time
05 - Ethereal Nature
06 - Moose
07 - Tiny Flowers II
08 - Olivia
09 - Sunroom
10 - Snow Amplified
11 - Ruins
12 - Who Cares
Media Report:
Genre: dream-pop
Origin: Brooklyn, New York, USA Â
Format: FLAC
Format/Info: Free Lossless Audio Codec
Bit rate mode: Variable
Channel(s): 2 channels
Sampling rate: 44.1 KHz
Bit depth: 16 bits
Compression mode: Lossless
Writing library: libFLAC 1.2.1 (UTC 2007-09-17)
Note: If you like the music, support the artist
Files:
(2024) Jackie West - Close to the Mystery [FLAC]- 06 - Moose.flac (35.8 MB)
- 01 - End of the World.flac (20.4 MB)
- 02 - Differences.flac (17.4 MB)
- 03 - Dreamscape.flac (21.5 MB)
- 04 - Have the Time.flac (22.1 MB)
- 05 - Ethereal Nature.flac (19.0 MB)
- [TGx]Downloaded from torrentgalaxy.to .txt (0.7 KB)
- 07 - Tiny Flowers II.flac (14.9 MB)
- 08 - Olivia.flac (19.6 MB)
- 09 - Sunroom.flac (29.1 MB)
- 10 - Snow Amplified.flac (25.0 MB)
- 11 - Ruins.flac (24.4 MB)
- 12 - Who Cares.flac (22.0 MB)
- audiochecker.log (0.8 KB)
- cover.jpg (189.4 KB)
- Torrent_downloaded_from_Demonoid.is_.txt (0.1 KB)
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