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(6 Customer Reviews)
Personnel: Joanna Newsom (vocals, harp); Joanna Newsom; Matt Cartsonis (banjo, mandolin); John Wittenberg, Cameron Patrick, Shari Zippert, Sharon Jackson, Edmund Stein, Gina Kronstadt, Vladimir Polimatidi, Julie Rogers, Peter Kent (violin); Caroline Buckman, Jessica van Velzen, Karen Elaine, Marda Todd, Miriam Mayer, David Stenske, Briana Bandy (viola); Giovna Clayton, Erika Duke-Kirkpartick (cello); Patricia Cloud, Susan Greenberg (flute); Van Dyke Parks (accordion); Peter Nevin, Jeff Driskill (clarinet); Phillip Fethar (oboe); John D Mitchell (bassoon); Robert O'Donnell, Jr. (trumpet); Terrence Schonig (marimba); Grant Geissman (electric guitar); Lee Sklar (electric bass); Don Heffington (percussion). Audio Mixer: Jim O'Rourke. Recording information: Entourage Studios, LA (12/2005-06/2006); The Village Recording Studio, LA (12/2005-06/2006). Arranger: Van Dyke Parks. It shouldn't be a surprise that an artist as stridently unconventional as Joanna Newsom would make a second album that overturns all the expectations established by her first. While Newsom's harp, highly poetic lyrics, and distinctive, child-like voice will be familiar to fans of THE MILK-EYED MENDER, YS takes Newsom's art in a new, startling directions. The quaint, self-contained folk portraits of the debut are obliterated here in favor of sprawling epics that recall sea shanties, Homeric myths, and progressive rock. Newsom's words are still highly literate and evocative, though they seem more narrative and symbolic than the surreal expressions of MENDER. The album is graced by string arrangements from Van Dyke Parks which create a swelling, dramatic counterpoint to Newsom's performances. Production assistance from indie-rock titans Steve Albini and Jim O'Rourke helps make this stellar effort one of 2006's most provocative releases. The Milk-Eyed Mender was a striking debut that set Joanna Newsom apart from her indie folk contemporaries. Its simplicity and depth, and the way it sounded timeless and fresh, made her a singular figure in that scene. On her second album, Ys (pronounced "ease"), she continues to move in a very different direction than her peers, and even a different one than what her audience might expect. The Milk-Eyed Mender's 12 gentle vignettes sounded like they were basking in sunlight; Ys is epic, restless, and demanding, made up of five dazzling, shape-shifting songs that range from seven to 16 minutes long. Newsom embarks on this adventure of an album with help from talents as diverse as engineer Steve Albini, arranger Van Dyke Parks, and producer Jim O'Rourke (who, come to think of it, is the perfect meeting point between Albini and Parks). Ys' boldly intricate sound plays like an embellished, illuminated, expanded version of Newsom's previous work. Parks' lavish, but never intrusive, orchestral arrangements sometimes make the album feel -- in the best possible way -- like a Broadway musical based on The Milk-Eyed Mender, particularly on the album closer, "Cosmia." Crucially, though, Ys isn't any less "real" than Newsom's other music just because it's more polished. The nature and craft imagery in her lyrics, the transporting sense of wonder and the one-of-a-kind voice of The Milk-Eyed Mender are here too, just in a much more refined and ambitious form: Ys is a gilt-edged, bone china teacup to Mender's earthenware mug. Along with the beautifully filigreed arrangements and melodies, which mingle strings, jew's-harps, and spaghetti Western horns with Appalachian, Celtic, and even Asian influences, the album shows Newsom's development as a singer. She has more nuance and control, particularly over the keening edge of her voice, which is recorded so clearly that when it cracks, it tears the air like a tangible exclamation point. Ys' daring, plentiful wordplay makes it even more of a rarity: an extremely musically accomplished album with lyrics to match. On "Only Skin" alone, Newsom goes from rhyming "fishin' poles" with "swSpin (p.95) - 4.5 stars out of 5 -- "Newsom plays her part with total, unblinking conviction, luxuriating in the lovely imperfections of her voice....The album functions as one long suite, a spellbinding poem." Spin (p.62) - Ranked #06 in Spin's "The 40 Best Albums of 2006" -- "Newsom is an eccentrically voiced experimenter who follows her nonconformist muse wherever it may lead." Entertainment Weekly (p.109) - "[C]o-producer Van Dyke Parks and a gorgeous full orchestra have an ameliorating effect....Lovely..." -- Grade: B+ Q (p.141) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "[U]tterly entrancing...Part Renaissance poetry, part fairy-tale." Alternative Press (p.190) - "[T]he beating heart of Newsom's tales, at turns whimsical and melancholic, enchant with a simple calculus: A woman, a harp and a story to tell." Magnet (p.102) - "[T]echnically flawless and masterfully executed....Her harp rings mellow and silky..." Dirty Linen (p.59) - "[T]he patient listener will be rewarded with music that is singularly beautiful." Mojo (Publisher) (p.118) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "YS sees Joanna Newsome rapturously create her own crepuscular, unsettling world, riper than a full-bellied pomegranate." Ys Music Review Average Rating: (3.5 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews AWESOME The best album i've heard the last 5 months...She's a genius!!!
Luv her till death :D
Submitted by GloryBox (greece)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
AWESOME The best album i've heard the last 5 months...She's a genius!!!
Luv her till death :D
Submitted by GloryBox (greece)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Truly Unique and All the More Precious For It. It's not very often that an album comes along that defies categorisation and more rarely that it seems impossible even to trace its influences and origins.This is such an album.
I can't remember the last time I heard an album that seemed to reinvent the possibilities in music itself. I'd like to say it's a ground-breaking album but the style is too 'of itself', creating its own hermetically sealed universe into which we can teleport;so it's hard to see it having much influence on the wider musical world.
I recommend if at all possible that you try and listen to the album in a distraction free environment (yes I'm talking darkened room, phone off-the-hook) it's worth the effort.
Some people refer to the several listens it takes to get in to the album, I found it took about a minute and a half.
Is it folk, prose-poetry,classical or just great pop music? There are perhaps elements of all.
A lot is sometimes made of how unusual her voice is, but to to be honest it is more distinctive than strange and it would be fair to say that her singing has become richer and more resonant than on her earlier works.
The album opens with Emily a song so rich in imagery and strong in melody it would justify the purchase of the album on its own, conjuring visions of meteorites, skimming stones and raging seas.The stories continue through out the five extended pieces, the orchestral arrangements by Van Dyke Parks contribute greatly to the feel of the work, at times darting in and out like fish, at others swooping and soaring like birds around the central core of harp and voice.
So rich is the sound created by that combination of harp and voice that it was only on seeing her live that I realised that "Sawdust and Diamonds" (track 3) features no orchestration.
The thing that strikes me most about this music is richness of its melodic content, this makes it far more accessible than you might expect.
Allow this music into your heart and it can transport you into other times and places and leave you with an aching sense of loss when you have to leave.
Buy this album if you love music but aren't afraid to embrace something truly different. Submitted by wjameswalker25 (B'ham,England.) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Mystifyingly self-indulgent on the first spin Saw the set live tonight. Heard Ys the whole way home. Impressive live yet I kept growing more impatient. Love it or hate it album. It is artwork in its purest form.
My positives- Challenging. Amazing in its scope. Lyrically brilliant.
Negatives-Too non-linear (and this is for a guy who loves non-linear) and I'm sorry, the songs are too long. The movements build yet don't deliver. Submitted by Kilgore (Kansas City, MO, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
55 minutes of impatience 'Ys' makes me feel impatient, irritated, uninspired, and disappointed. I don't have a problem with lengthy tracks if they are engaging. However, these tracks are just not engaging enough nor do they have as strong an impact on my emotions as 'Milk-Eyed Mender' does.
The "string orchestra" accompanying Ms. Newsom serves only to distract and make things a bit more awkward sounding. In fact, the "orchestra" is so uninspiring; it could easily be mistaken for a canned string rhythm selection found on a Casio keyboard. And the singing, oh gosh, the singing...where is the swooping, swirling, startling passion that I heard on 'Milk-Eyed Mender'? For the most part, what you get here is hurried and heartless sing-speak that is in desperate need of pauses.
Kudos to Ms. Newsom for diving even deeper into the experimental music pool, but I just can't splash around with her this time around.
Submitted by PAR (Clemmons, NC) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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