| | Mirah C'Mon Miracle CD Mirah Discography of CDs
 |
|
Our Price: $12.69 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
|  |
A much quieter and more thoughtful album than any of her previous releases, Mirah's C'Mon Miracle doesn't grab the listener by the ears and boldly proclaim its greatness the way that her last album, Advisory Committee, did. Instead of offering the scattershot brilliance of that album or You Think It's Like This but It's Really Like This, C'Mon Miracle is more focused, more mature, and closer to a traditional singer/songwriter's work. This doesn't mean that it's conventional or boring though -- far from it. Even though the subtlety and complexity of songs like "Nobody Has to Stay" and "Promise to Be Kind" show how much her craft has grown over the years, the album still has enough of a K Records feel to keep fans of Mirah's smart, creative indie pop happy. The wonderfully sympathetic artist-producer relationship between her and Phil Elvrum is a key part of C'Mon Miracle, helping to balance the album's more serious leanings and her more whimsical-sounding earlier work. For the most part, Elvrum's production is understated and far less busy than that of Advisory Committee. On songs like "Jerusalem" -- which was intended for a Hanukkah compilation but rejected because it was too political (it criticizes Israel's hawkish behavior in the most poetic terms) -- he sets Mirah's voice like a jewel, surrounding it with pretty but unobtrusive arrangements. However, that just means that C'Mon Miracle's elaborately produced moments stand out even more. "The Light" -- which appeared on Mirah's collaboration with the Black Cat Orchestra, To All We Stretch the Open Arm, with a very different arrangement -- gets the deluxe Elvrum treatment: it begins with distant, quasi-industrial percussion and stormy guitars and ends on a surprisingly gentle note. "We're Both So Sorry" is even more elaborate, using autoharp, brass, double-tracked vocals, fuzzed-out percussion, and guitars to underscore the duality of the song's breakup lament. These songs, along with "The Struggle" (on which Elvrum is credited with playing the chest), recall Advisory Committee's glory, and even though it's tempting to want all of C'Mon Miracle to sound like this, the album does have its own distinctive character, particularly on the tracks inspired by Mirah's trip to Buenos Aires; "Don't Die in Me" and especially "The Dogs of B.A." integrate Latin folk influences into her sound effortlessly. "Look Up," meanwhile, rocks harder than anything she's ever done before, and the charming chamber pop of "Exactly Where We're From" also proves that Mirah hasn't forsaken the eclectic spirit of her music. An album about war, peace, and longing, C'Mon Miracle isn't as showy as some of her previous outings, but it does show that Mirah's music works on both a large and small scale. ~ Heather Phares
Audio Mixers: Bryce Panic; Phil Elvrum; Calvin Johnson.
Recording information: Buenos Aires, Argentina (2003); Dub Narcotic (2003).
Photographers: Emily Kingan; Mytz.
Mirah includes: Mirah Yom Tov Zeitlyn (vocals, guitar, keyboard); Emily Kingan, Jason Anderson (guitar, bass); Phil Elverum (guitar, horns, xylophone, drums, percussion); Bryce Panic (guitar, accordion, drums, percussion, background vocals); Nora Danielson (violin); Ramona Tougas (cello); Susan Ploetz (autoharp); Warren Lee (piano); Aaron Hartman, Themba Lewis (double bass).
Personnel: Bryce Panic (guitar, accordion, drums, percussion, background vocals); Phil Elvrum (guitar, horns, organ, xylophone, drums, snare drum, percussion, sampler); Mytz (guitar, keyboards, pandeiro); Armin Zomorodi, Jason Anderson (guitar); Susan Ploetz (autoharp); Nora Danielson (violin); Ramona Tougas, Lori Goldston (cello); Warren Lee (piano); Khaela Maricich (organ); Aaron Hartman, Themba Lewis (double bass); Emily Kingan (drums).
Entertainment Weekly (p.80) - "[S]he creates an atmosphere of such intimate ease, you feel as if she's singing for you alone." - Grade: B+ Uncut (p.112) - 3 stars out of 5 - "[M]oments of startling beauty emerge from the fuzz-drenched experiments." Mojo (Publisher) (p.114) - 4 stars out of 5 - "An album of lightness and substance, in perfectly observed amounts." C'Mon Miracle Music | List Price | $14.98 (You save $2.29) | | Category | Rock/Pop Albums, Rock CDs, Alternative, Lo Fi | | Label | K | | Orig Year | 2004 | | All Time Sales Rank | 42123  | | CD Universe Part number | 6731549 | | Catalog number | 160 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | May 04, 2004 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Engineer | Bryce Panic; Phil Elvrum; Calvin Johnson | | Personnel | Lori Goldston - cello Jason - guitar Phil Elverum - guitar, horns, organ, xylophone, drums, snare drum, percussion, sampler Bryce Panic - guitar, accordion, drums, percussion, background vocals Emily Kingan - drums Khaela Maricich - organ Aaron Hartman Armin Zomorodi Mytz - guitar, keyboards, pandeiro Nora Danielson - violin Ramona Tougas Susan Ploetz - autoharp Themba Lewis - double bass Warren Lee - piano
|
Mirah C'Mon Miracle Songs | 1. | Nobody Has to Stay | |
| 2. | Jerusalem | |
| 3. | Light, The | |
| 4. | Don't Die in Me | |
| 5. | Look Up! | |
| 6. | We're Both So Sorry | |
| 7. | Dogs of B.A., The | |
| 8. | Struggle, The | |
| 9. | You've Gone Away Enough | |
| 10. | Promise to Me | |
| 11. | Exactly Where We're From | |
| C'Mon Miracle Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Mirah C'Mon Miracle CD. Check our review guidelines for specific details regarding customer review policy. To submit your review, please fill out the above form and click "Submit Review." A staff member will then verify your review meets our guidelines. Upon approval, your review will be published within a few days. Please do not use this form to comment on web site errors or for order related questions. If you have concerns of this nature, please contact customer service by filling out this form.
Purchase C'Mon Miracle CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Mirah You Think It's Like This But Really It's Like This CD (2000)
C'Mon Miracle album
$12.19 Mirah Yom Tov Zeitlyn's debut full-length is a true indie pop triumph. From beginning to end, You Think It's Like This But Really It's Like ...
| | Mirah Advisory Committee CD (2001)
C'Mon Miracle CD music
$12.19 Mirah's You Think It's Like This But It's Really Like This, was a sweet, sensitive collection of folky indie pop, but her follow-up, Advisory Committee, is such a stunning leap forward that it feels like a true introduction to her music. The album retains some of the homespun lo-fi charm of You Think It's Like This..., but Advisory Committee is also dramatic, even theatrical, as on the stunning first track, "Cold Cold Water." A sweeping spaghetti Western of a song, its swelling strings, galloping percussion, and haunting vocals portray being in love as a life-or-death situation. Only Björk does this type of drama as well, and a large part of the song's success is due to Phil ...
| | Cat Power You Are Free CD (2003)
C'Mon Miracle music CDs
$10.15 The first album in four years from Chan Marshall, one of the premier female singer-songwriters of our generation. This album explores the world of relationships and fame. Catchy, intense, and beguiling. Gatefold paper sleeve. Matador. ...
| | Walkmen Bows And Arrows CD (2004)
C'Mon Miracle songs
$11.39 A rock revivalist opus similar to those by the Strokes and Stripes, the Walkmen's sophomore effort is a genuine rock "album" in the traditional sense: each song is unique to the others and it all fits together as a cohesive work of art. Instant classics include "The Rat," with vocalist Hamilton Leithauser screaming out with so much lonely rage that two tracks later ...
| | Iron & Wine Our Endless Numbered Days CD (2004)
C'Mon Miracle album
$11.99 Initial pressings of OUR ENDLESS NUMBERED DAYS comes with a 4-song bonus CD.
While Sam Beam's self-recorded first outing as Iron & Wine, THE CREEK DRANK THE CRADLE, features a hushed bedroom atmosphere, his second ...
| | Bright Eyes I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning CD (2005)
C'Mon Miracle CD music
$10.79 In early 2005, young indie icon Conor Oberst (AKA Bright Eyes) unveiled two full-length albums--I'M WIDE AWAKE, IT'S MORNING and DIGITAL ASH IN A DIGITAL URN. Whereas the latter proved to be a departure into electronic music, the former sticks to Oberst's established sound, which combines the urgency and heart-on-the-sleeve sentiment of emo-rock with twangy, down-home ...
| | Blind Lemon Jefferson Complete Recorded Works Vol. 1 (1925-26) CD (1994)
C'Mon Miracle music CDs
$13.25 90 performances by Blind Lemon Jefferson were reissued in chronological sequence as his "complete recorded works" by the Document label in 1994. The songs were parceled out neatly so that material from each successive year of his short recording career occupied a separate disc, with volume one containing 23 selections recorded between December 1925 and December 1926. Those who feel prepared to shed the shackles of convention and jettison preconceived notions of what the blues or music in general is supposed to sound like should seriously consider obtaining all four volumes, for listening to nearly every record known to have been made by Blind Lemon Jefferson can be a moving and transformationally rewarding experience. Born near the end of the 19th century in the village of Couchman, south of Dallas between Mexia and Corsicana in Freestone County, TX, he came up in a racially segregated environment where blindness lowered his already rock-bottom social status as a member of the African American underclass. The name Lemon, which is believed to have been bestowed upon him at birth, was a reference to the shape of his head. (A few years later, this playful aspect of the culture would cause saxophonist Coleman Hawkins to be dubbed "Bean" by his fellow musicians because they felt that his cranium resembled a haricot bean.) Legend has it that Lemon and the slightly younger Blind Willie Johnson, who grew up in Marlin a few miles southeast of Waco, would sometimes perform publicly on the streets of Marlin at the same time. This would have made for an intriguing if inadvertent near-rupturing ...
| | Kid606 GQ On The Eq++ CD (2001) Remastered
C'Mon Miracle songs
$6.05
| | Women & Songs: Beginnings, Vol. 2 CDs (2001) Import
C'Mon Miracle album
$32.59
| | Ratso & Swithcblade Playing With Rats CD (2003)
$13.49 | | p j harvey Uh Huh Her CD (2004)
C'Mon Miracle CD music
$12.59
| | Sounds Of Nature 2 CD (2007) (Import)
C'Mon Miracle music CDs
$7.75 European pressing. Budget. 2005.
| | La Bussola CD (Import)
$18.39 | | I Successi Di Nilla Pizzi CD (2007) (Import) Import
C'Mon Miracle songs
$14.45
| | Tom Schreck Outsider CD (2009)
C'Mon Miracle album
$16.45 Produced by Tom Schreck for Nashville Outsider Music. Strings arranged and conducted by Tom Schreck. All songs written by Tom Schreck, except “Heartbreaker’s ...
|
|
|