Sarah Slean - Day One
Facts
| Artist(s) | Sarah Slean |
| Studio | Wea International |
| Release Date | October 11, 2004 |
| UPC Code | 825646181025 |
| Buy this item | $32.99 at Amazon.com As of Dec 3 20:40 EST (details) 2 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Import |
Tracks
- Pilgrim
- Lucky Me
- Mary
- California
- Day One
- Out in the Park
- Vertigo
- When Another Midnight
- The Score
- Your Wish Is My Wish
- Wake Up
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Pretty Good |
| Sarah Slean deserves to be 3000 times more well known than she currently is |
And why not? It's a formula that sells, with proven appeal to a subset of the music-listening population. Recent years have seen a proliferation of such artists, running the gamut from Vanessa Carlteon to Charlotte Martin, from Rachel Yamagata to Regina Spektor. Sarah Slean stands out from this pack of admitted worthies, though.
If Kate Bush is the High Priestess, Tori Amos the Queen, and Fiona Apple the precocious prodigal princess with a penchant for jazz and hip-hop, then Sarah Slean is the madwoman in the attic of the castle. And I say that as a compliment --- her powers, both as a songwriter and a performer, are stunning, yet so many people live their musical lives without ever realizing she's tucked away up there in Canada, pondering philosophy, conversing with the mice and the ravens, and writing some of the best arty pop-rock of our age.
If I had to make a direct comparison, I would say she is something like an early Kate Bush with a modern spin, a similarly theatrical style, and better piano chops. And Canadian. But why make such a comparison? She has just as much in common with William Blake, really. Slean is one of the few in this genre who whole-heartedly deserves the mantle of true original.
And Day One is the fullest realization of her powers thus far. While the piano-pop set might find more to love on her second-to-most-recent album, Nightbugs (see: Elliot, Duncan, My Invitation), this rhythmic tour-de-force is both Slean at her most accessible and Slean at her artistic best.
Take the second song and first single, "Lucky Me," a moderate radio hit in Canada. This is actually an uptempo polka (of all things!) cleverly masquerading as a jaunty, catchy-as-hell pop-rock tune. And is it about, say, a relationship gone wrong? Desire? Repression? Nothing so mundane, my dears. "Lucky Me" is a thoughtful and insightful examination of the conflict between science and faith in the modern world, and the psychological (or spiritual) implications this struggle has. Heady stuff that you can tap your feet to.
And, as if this wasn't enough, Slean can craft a melody like no other. There are very few artists I have ever encountered in my wide and varied listenings who can match her for sheer sing-a-long-a-bility. Her soaring choruses and lilting verses have more hooks than a fishing tackle.
The album has a great balance of light and dark. Pilgrim, the opener, is heavy with despair and dread, while When Another Midnight is an almost frantic call to arms, urging people to remember beauty and joy in a world that is becoming increasingly chaotic, cruel, and insane.
"How to live a noble life in this, the Age of Insanity
when every prophet's face is turning white: it's the look of "can it be?"
it's shock, it's horror, it's despair!
it's Socrates weeping in a wheelchair
teacher drooling, unaware: "where, my students? where? where?"
And yet, ultimately, Day One is a celebration of joy and life in the face of such peril. The album is, essentially, about laughing in the face of darkness. The title track urges us not to let the drudgery of daily life get to us, and to seek out a rebirth of vitality and vibrancy. The sweet but touching Mary celebrates Slean's grandmother, who is "toughest of the tough / but still a lady." Out in the Park is a lilting waltz that reminds us not to forget the joy and sublime beauty one can find in little things (like feeding the birds in the park).
My own personal favourite, Vertigo, is a song that encapsulates the over-all feeling of the album, in my mind: it is a song about driving on the highway at night and feeling so happy to be alive, and yet being so afraid of dying because of that happiness. It is a conflict of emotion (joy and dread) that I often experience, but that few songwriters have examined. Slean does it, and does it masterfully.
Day One is an album that is not to be missed. In my mind, it is an equal with Tori Amos's From the Choirgirl Hotel or even Kate Bush's Hounds of Love. It is rhythmic and more accessible than Slean's earlier work (just as the those other two were for Amos and Bush), and yet it is her strongest, boldest, bravest, and most successful artistic statement to date (again, as those other two were for each respective artist). I cannot recommend it strongly enough. June 6, 2006
| a true, north star in my musical sky |
-Jim Houck [...] July 5, 2005
| A newbie guide to Day One |
| wow |
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