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Hilde Marie Kjersem - A Killer for that Ache (2008)

Hilde Marie Kjersem - A Killer for that Ache (2008)

BAND/ARTIST: Hilde Marie Kjersem

  • Title: A Killer for that Ache
  • Year Of Release: 2008
  • Label: Rune Grammofon
  • Genre: female vocal, jazz
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log)
  • Total Time: 00:42:51
  • Total Size: 232 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

1. Sleepyhead
2. Mary Full of Grace
3. Fantasy
4. Marie Antoinette
5. A Killer for That Ache
6. Midwest Country
7. Save Up
8. London Bridge
9. It Is Easy
10. Catching a Star
11. Working Girl

Rune Grammofon suggest that this debut long-player by Hilde Marie Kjersem is "neither a jazz album nor your typical melancholy Nordic singer songwriter album", and certainly, anyone expecting something along the lines of the label's other prominent female songwriter, Susannnna (& The Magical orchestra) Wallumrod will find Kjersem to be a rather different prospect. While her delicate, calmly articulate voice is comparable in its hushed loveliness, musically this is a slightly more volatile experience. Early on you'll think you've settled into a fairly mainstream pop groove with ballads like "Mary Full Of Grace" and the minimal, autoharp anti-lullaby "Sleepyhead". But oddness is just around the corner, as on the slightly bizarre "Marie Antoinette". Next up, the multitracked acappella of the title track (and later on, "Save Up") proves to be incredibly pretty, but the abstract electronic drum contortions of "London Bridge" and the Roobarb & Custard basslines of "Catching a Star" prevent Kjersem from coming across as too delicate.
Review
When singer/songwriter Hilde Marie Kjersem performed with her group in May, as part of a Bokna Fjord and Lysefjorden boat tour during the JazzNorway in a Nutshell 2008 showcase, she had a lot of things going against her. The group was performing outdoor on the boat's deck with a barely adequate PA system, the wind created numerous problems for the band and specifically the singer's ability to hear herself and maintain her pitch, and the less-than-perfect conditions seemed to compel Kjersem and the group to substitute volume and drama for what appeared to be a series of appealing, slightly off-kilter pop tunes. A Killer For That Ache, Kjersem's debut as a leader following records with the now-disbanded TUB Quartet and Twelve O'Clock Tales (Curling Legs, 2005), places her in a far better context, delivering on the promise of those songs.
The group was also hamstrung by a largely more conventional rock group line-up of guitar, bass, keys and drums, though Kjersem did play her autoharp on the charmingly naive "Sleepyhead" that also opens A Killer. While her performance suggested a rich, interpretive voice capable of great subtlety and greater power, it quickly got lost when the group came in. Here, with economical and better conceived instrumentation that nevertheless weighs heavily on Jørgen Munkeby and Sjur Meiljeteig's various reeds and horns, the songs take on a lusher complexion.
Munkeby, the mainstay of Rune Grammofon group Shining, is a versatile multi-instrumentalist who elevated that group's In the Kingdom of Kitsch You Will Be a Monster (2005) and Shining (2007) into the realm of challenging, epic-based sonic collage. Here he proves equally capable of sparer contexts, his bass clarinet driving the minimal pulse of "It Is Easy," alternating with a strange, carnival-esque chorus that reflects Kjersem's interest in Tim Burton and the film director's longtime musical cohort, Danny Elfman.
But A Killer is Kjersem's show, all eleven songs written by the singer and demonstrating a wealth of ideas and breadth of scope. The title track is gorgeous, where a layered choir is all that's needed to support Kjersem's evocative vocal. "Midwest Country" is, indeed, an Americana-centric song that still manages to feel somehow skewed, while another solely vocal track, "Save Up," reflects a southern gospel influence. Kjersem's voice is remarkably malleable—soft and warm on the closing "Working Girl," where a lovely mix of Torbjørn Folke Zetterberg banjo and Kjerstem's Fender Rhodes leads into a majestic ending; understated on the electonica-centric "London Bridge"; and ethereal on the dramatic "Marie Antoinette." She rarely lets loose, as she did more consistently in performance, but it makes the rare occasion when she does here far more effective.
With a combination of oftentimes innocent lyrics and a modern approach to songwriting that meshes a wealth of influences and production ideas, A Killer For That Ache is a welcome debut that's a far better representation of Kjersem's potential than her sadly trouble-fraught performance.


Hilde Marie Kjersem - A Killer for that Ache (2008)



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