Amy van Keeken - In Dreams (2018)
BAND/ARTIST: Amy van Keeken
- Title: In Dreams
- Year Of Release: 2018
- Label: Amy Van Keeken / Scorpioseventysix
- Genre: Folk, Alt-Americana, Singer/Songwriter
- Quality: FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 32:07
- Total Size: 188 Mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
1. Here Come Those Good Feelings (3:14)
2. Happy in My Heart (3:36)
3. In Dreams (3:16)
4. Hide It Away (3:08)
5. All for You (3:31)
6. Pressing on Me (3:25)
7. This Morning (3:45)
8. You've Gone Away (4:56)
9. Come with Me (3:16)
1. Here Come Those Good Feelings (3:14)
2. Happy in My Heart (3:36)
3. In Dreams (3:16)
4. Hide It Away (3:08)
5. All for You (3:31)
6. Pressing on Me (3:25)
7. This Morning (3:45)
8. You've Gone Away (4:56)
9. Come with Me (3:16)
There’s a theory that any album that starts with a drum machine rhythm cribbed from an old organ is going to be inherently great. And wouldn’t ya know—In Dreams rolls out with those ol’ castanets clip-clopping along, driving the backbeat of “Here Come Those Good Feelings”. Now, the theory is mine, and I just invented it, but I’m definitely right. We’re rollin’.
And vibes—this album has ‘em! Both figuratively and literally, supplied by Doug Organ. If you could somehow pull a cozy over-sized Sunday sweater through your speakers, “Happy In My Heart” would be that sound. Some strings (provided by Nathaniel Wong) swell in to take the song home.
In Dreams is bit of a slow-burner until we hit the title track and find ourselves transported to a sun-bleached bell tower, watching some Morricone-tracked sand-blown shootout. Longtime co-conspirator Darren Radbourne provides a yearning and mournful trumpet, underpinned with a sort of fevered music box plink-plonk right out of a Leone film.
“Hide It Away” finally peels back the curtain to reveal 70s Mac hanging with some sleazy Stranglers-styled wheezy organ. Drummer Peter Hendrickson makes his first appearance for this live-off-the-floor banger, all Stevie Nicks shawls and carpeted vans. Let us boogie.
Worth mentioning here that the recording by Patrick Michalak allows for these songs to breathe, and dammit if they don’t feel more alive for it. There is a sort of dreamy breathiness inherent in these songs—a finger sliding across an acoustic guitar; a tape-delayed note ghosting away. When did musicians become so afraid of space? A lot can happen in between two notes, and van Keeken lets it land throughout In Dreams.
“Everything Is Pressing On Me” takes that all-too-familiar sentiment and kills it with kindness, all bedroom-doubled-tracked vocals and dreamy 70s synth. Existential dread has rarely sounded so beautiful.
“You’ve Gone Away” is a duet with Nickelas ‘Smokey’ Johnson, but George & Tammy this ain’t. The drunken sway evokes the sound of lost love in a Long Black Veil kind of way. Smokey’s barstool-fuzz guitar tries to sweep away the memories but sometimes the heart stays out past last call, before “Come With Me” gets the band back together for a sing-a-long send-off.
You could throw on a Carole King or Fleetwood Mac record on either side of In Dreams and no one would know we’d left the era of feathered hair and close harmonies. You could watch van Keeken sharing the stage with nü- cosmic-country troubadours like the Highest Order or Kacy & Clayton and feel on the cutting edge of something. Where song craft and a sense of space is a careful consideration. Space.
And vibes—this album has ‘em! Both figuratively and literally, supplied by Doug Organ. If you could somehow pull a cozy over-sized Sunday sweater through your speakers, “Happy In My Heart” would be that sound. Some strings (provided by Nathaniel Wong) swell in to take the song home.
In Dreams is bit of a slow-burner until we hit the title track and find ourselves transported to a sun-bleached bell tower, watching some Morricone-tracked sand-blown shootout. Longtime co-conspirator Darren Radbourne provides a yearning and mournful trumpet, underpinned with a sort of fevered music box plink-plonk right out of a Leone film.
“Hide It Away” finally peels back the curtain to reveal 70s Mac hanging with some sleazy Stranglers-styled wheezy organ. Drummer Peter Hendrickson makes his first appearance for this live-off-the-floor banger, all Stevie Nicks shawls and carpeted vans. Let us boogie.
Worth mentioning here that the recording by Patrick Michalak allows for these songs to breathe, and dammit if they don’t feel more alive for it. There is a sort of dreamy breathiness inherent in these songs—a finger sliding across an acoustic guitar; a tape-delayed note ghosting away. When did musicians become so afraid of space? A lot can happen in between two notes, and van Keeken lets it land throughout In Dreams.
“Everything Is Pressing On Me” takes that all-too-familiar sentiment and kills it with kindness, all bedroom-doubled-tracked vocals and dreamy 70s synth. Existential dread has rarely sounded so beautiful.
“You’ve Gone Away” is a duet with Nickelas ‘Smokey’ Johnson, but George & Tammy this ain’t. The drunken sway evokes the sound of lost love in a Long Black Veil kind of way. Smokey’s barstool-fuzz guitar tries to sweep away the memories but sometimes the heart stays out past last call, before “Come With Me” gets the band back together for a sing-a-long send-off.
You could throw on a Carole King or Fleetwood Mac record on either side of In Dreams and no one would know we’d left the era of feathered hair and close harmonies. You could watch van Keeken sharing the stage with nü- cosmic-country troubadours like the Highest Order or Kacy & Clayton and feel on the cutting edge of something. Where song craft and a sense of space is a careful consideration. Space.
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Year 2018 | Country | Folk | FLAC / APE
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