Swanlights, the fourth full-length by Antony and the Johnsons, reveals that 2009's The Crying Light was a stepping stone that furthered Antony (now Anohni)'s sophistication as a songwriter, arranger, and singer. While that album's tunes about acceptance, death, transformation, and loss were added to immeasurably by Nico Muhly's gorgeous string arrangements, Swanlights employs the same band, this time augmented by a chamber orchestra. Anohni uses her voice on this set as much as a textural element in her songs as she does to ...
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Swanlights, the fourth full-length by Antony and the Johnsons, reveals that 2009's The Crying Light was a stepping stone that furthered Antony (now Anohni)'s sophistication as a songwriter, arranger, and singer. While that album's tunes about acceptance, death, transformation, and loss were added to immeasurably by Nico Muhly's gorgeous string arrangements, Swanlights employs the same band, this time augmented by a chamber orchestra. Anohni uses her voice on this set as much as a textural element in her songs as she does to deliver poetic, and sometimes head-scratchingly obtuse lyrics, like "Elect the salt mother, for she is a selective Christ." These songs engage with popular genres from folk-rock to grand classical chamber orchestral, but they do touch on vanguard art song as well. Their themes often comment on the natural world -- a huge part of Anohni's moral conscience -- but lyrically, this is a more difficult album to pin down. Album-opener "Everything Is New" features one of her standard tropes: using a repetitive piano line and her voice to play upon the title in various ways, breaking the words up in various combinations and cadences to create a mantra-like effect before bringing in the band, for a near-modal exploration to hang her lyrics on. "The Great White Ocean" follows it, still using that theme, before becoming its own lovely, near-nursery rhyme; it sounds like a prayer adorned with acoustic guitars, Julia Kent's cello and Anohni's vocal softly moan between and after the verses. "I'm in Love" feels a bit like Steve Reich scoring an early-'60s Doc Pomus song, with winds, strings, upright bass, drums, and piano all melding in an almost fingerpopping, soulful anthem to romance. "The Spirit Was Gone" is a haunting meditation on death, with Anohni accompanied by Kent and a small orchestra, but it's countered by the almost shimmering pop of "Thank You for Your Love." The strangeness of "Fletta," an Icelandic duet with Björk, is in a genre all its own and departs markedly from the rest of the album's contents. The voices are accompanied only by Anohni's piano. The sparse phrasing is nonetheless insistent, its melody walking the margins of folk and classical minimalism (if the latter was heard by Kurt Weill). Classical aspirations continue on "Salt Silver Oxygen," but these songs as a whole feel like a place where Van Dyke Parks might be entertained by the spring-like harmonies of Vaughan Williams' songs. Ultimately, in mood, ambition, and execution, Swanlights is a testament to Anohni's increasingly iconoclastic -- yet gorgeously accessible -- brand of art pop. ~ Thom Jurek, Rovi
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Add this copy of Swanlights to cart. $4.93, very good condition, Sold by HPB-Emerald rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Dallas, TX, UNITED STATES, published 2010 by Secretly Canadian.
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Add this copy of Swanlights to cart. $7.98, like new condition, Sold by Streetlight_Records rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Santa Cruz, CA, UNITED STATES, published 2010 by SECRETLY CANADIAN.
Add this copy of Swanlights to cart. $23.41, new condition, Sold by newtownvideo rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from huntingdon valley, PA, UNITED STATES, published 2010 by Secretly Canadian.