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Personnel: Feist (acoustic guitar); Bryden Baird (flugelhorn); Mocky (acoustic bass); Julian Brown (electric bass); Jesse Baird, Gonzales (drums); Jamie Lidell (unknown instrument); Town Hall (background vocals). Additional personnel: Eirik Glambek Boe (vocals); Afie Jurvanen (guitar); Lori Gemmel (harp); Sandra Baron (violin); Mary Stein (cello); Pierre Luc Jamain (organ); Ohad Benchetrit, Charles Spearin (unknown instrument); Kevin Drew, Brendan Canning (background vocals). Canadian singer-songwriter Leslie Feist first gained prominence working with the Montreal shock-rapper Peaches and later the Toronto-based collective Broken Social Scene, but with the release of 2004's masterful LET IT DIE, she embarked on a solo career that quickly eclipsed her previous work. Following the pleasant but inessential remix album OPEN SEASON, 2007's THE REMINDER is Feist's true follow-up to LET IT DIE, and it deepens and solidifies that album's strengths. Combining jazzy torch songs with acoustic, folkish ballads, THE REMINDER is as quietly powerful as her Broken Social Scene bandmate Emily Haines's equally subdued solo debut, KNIVES DON'T HAVE YOUR BACK, but with a jazzy edge that recalls Nina Simone on tunes like "Sea Lion" (a standard also recorded by Simone) and the lush single "My Moon, My Man." When Leslie Feist released her breakthrough Let It Die, almost instantly she became an indie icon. Her pretty, sometimes melancholic love songs, her clear, campfire voice, her vaguely jazz- and disco-influenced arrangements (highlighted no better than with her cover of the Bee Gees' "Inside and Out"), and her association with darlings Broken Social Scene wooed critics and music fans alike. Her follow-up, The Reminder, will serve as proof that Feist's success was no fluke, as the album contains more of the same sweet, introspective lyrics and chords that float around love and longing (or lack thereof) like cottonwood seeds in late spring. Because that's what The Reminder, like Let It Die, is really: warm, lazy music made for those summer afternoons that creep into evening before you realize it. Feist's voice is as cleanly emotive as ever as she sings lines like "There's a limit to your love/Like a waterfall in slow motion" (from "The Limit to Your Love"), "Piecemeal can break your home in half/A love is not complete with only heat" (from "Intuition"), or "Put your weight against the door/Kick drum on the basement floor" (from the upbeat "I Feel It All"), confident but with a weakness, a fragility in it that comes out during the most sentimental lines. But this can also be a drawback. The singer can, at times, border on a kind of sappiness that seems better suited to Top 40 Matrix-produced pop songs than hipster-blog accolades. "We don't need to fight and cry/We, we could hold each other tight tonight," she breathes in the otherwise lovely "So Sorry," whose puerile rhymes are fortunately held up by the track's breezy sophistication. The same cannot be said however for "Brandy Alexander," which is too syrupy for its own sake (much like the drink on which it is based), with its repeated phrase "He's my Brandy Alexander" (juxtaposed with "I'm his Brandy Alexander") and "Goes down easy," as Motown-esque harmonies jump in to emphasize that last word. Why Feist, who shows her lyrical skills in tracks like "The Water," "My Moon My Man," and her reinterpretation of Nina Simone's "See-Line Woman" (incorrectly identified as "Sea Lion Woman"), "Sealion," believes it necessary to include such saccharine lines is a bit confusing, and hints at the suspicion that while undoubtedly she seems to have enjoyed very much making The Reminder, she also wasn't really challenging herself with it. She follows the same path she took with Let It Die -- which, being as strong as it was, is certainly not the worst decision she could've made -- and does it well, which means that the album does end up a consistently good listen. But it also means that it's not much ofRolling Stone (p.114) - Included in Rolling Stone's "50 Top Albums of the Year 2007" -- "Feist reaches out with gorgeously lovelorn ballads..." Spin (p.85) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "[L]isten through headphones and the album offers up bits of subdermal weirdness, as in 'Honey, Honey,' where luscious harmony vocals tangle with field-recording white noise." Magnet (p.96) - "Even from a secular point of view, it's difficult to characterize Leslie Feist's voice as anything but a divine gift." Reminder Music | List Price | $13.95 (You save $2.60) | | Category | Rock/Pop Albums, Rock CDs, Pop, Alternative | | Label | Interscope | | Orig Year | 2007 | | All Time Sales Rank | 1189  | | CD Universe Part number | 7406469 | | Catalog number | 000881902 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | May 01, 2007 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Producer | Renaud Letang; Feist; Gonales | | Engineer | Renaud Letang | | Recording Time | 50 minutes | | Personnel | Feist - acoustic guitar Bryden Baird - flugelhorn Gonzales - drums Jamie Lidell - unknown instrument Jesse Baird Julian Brown - electric bass Mocky - acoustic bass Town Hall - background vocals
Also: Eirik Glambek Boe, Brendan Canning, Charles Spearin, Kevin Drew, Ohad Benchetrit, Afie Jurvanen, Lori Gemmel, Mary Stein, Pierre Luc Jamain, Sandra Baron |
Reminder Music Review Average Rating: (3.8 out of 5 stars)   Exquisite, perfect record for any season. Personally I found "Let It Die", Feist's first album, quite pleasant yet utterly unremarkable. So fans of that album, and pop music in general, will be excited to discover that this record is leaps and bounds ahead of it's predecessor. Every track is well crafted, with a dizzying number of truly exceptional songs. First track "So Sorry" sets the tone for the album - beautiful and thoughtful. "1234" begins with soft guitar and ends amid a gorgeous harmony of brass. One of the few must-buy albums of this year! Submitted by Justin (Jackson, TN, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 1 found this helpful.
Listen to Mike! Mike from Knoxville (how's the Wig Sphere doing buddy?) is on the money. This album sums up the entire Faux-ternative (copyright Paul from Sydney 2007) movement of horrible but pretty little bands with zero to offer the world clogging up the airwaves with swill for people too stupid to hear the difference between the Pixies and the Yeah Yeah Yeahs (or No No Nos as I like to call them) 5 Stars outta a possible 500. Drivel, plain and simple. But at least she LOOKS cool and indie... And that's what matters, right kids? Submitted by Paul (Sydney, Australia.) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 3 of 5 found this helpful.
Not bad!!!!! Has good songs, but most songs are boring and slow.... most of it, are good, and contains such beautiful lyrics.... Submitted by mike (Toronto) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Good, good, good I love Feist, with a very suggestive sound and an exquisite voice.
I'd like that CDUniverse was selling the first disc: "Monarch", a 'rara avis' album but a jewel also. Submitted by Clopsan (Barcelona (Spain)) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Contrived Garbage Music I bought this album on a recommendation from a friend and was horrified at what I heard. This singer vocalizes in a completely unnatural voice to try to sound like someone from the 40s? as part of some sort of pretentious indie movement. A few of the songs are catchy, but the voice irritates me to death. It's like if you had an American friend who decided to always speak with a British accent to attract attention. I'm certain you would discard that friend, as I will this album. Submitted by Mark (Knoxville, TN) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 0 of 2 found this helpful.
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