Album Review
Avant-garde recording artist Liz Janes delivers a
more palatable follow-up to 2001’s Done Gone Fire.
While I enjoyed her debut, her song writing and
arrangements were bizarre and a bit of an acquired taste.
Liz quickly brings you up to speed on the opening
“Wonderkiller”. I think this song sums up what the
Liz Janes aesthetic is all about.
Liz is a gospel singer with the mad insanity of
horror film actress. “Wonderkiller” illustrates her
obsessive compulsion to be everything at once. The result
is incredibly rewarding. The urgency of “Streetlight”
makes Liz even more convincing. Then comes the
title track, and this is where the record begins to get
weighed down. The country singing Liz emerges.
That’s fine and all, but we see a re-occurring pattern
for the remainder of the album. Her voice is simply
stunning, no questioning that. Liz is the ultimate
lounge singer diva, and the instrumentation throughout is
rough and haphazard like her acclaimed debut, giving the
record undeniable authenticity. I just think the
alt-country overtones are over the top. Maybe turn the
overtones into overtones, and then we’d be talking about
a timeless indie classic. This one isn’t quite there.
~
Garrett Johnson
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