What Would the Community Think (CD)
MATADOR CLASSIC! WITH ACCOMPANYING MATADOR CLASSIC PRICE!
Chan (pronounced "Shawn") Marshall's second album under the name Cat Power, finds the North Carolinian at lo-fi maverick Doug Easley's Memphis studio, her soft, engagingly shy voice and delicate acoustic guitar supported by Easley's pedal steel and Sonic Youth drummer Steve Shelley's percussion. Though Easley and Shelley are better known for working with much louder, noisier artists than Marshall, they never overpower her sensitive but sturdy material. Sounding more self-assured than she did on her debut, 1995's DEAR SIR, Marshall invests more passion and fire in songs like the foreboding "Water and Air" and the obsessive, feedback and piano-laced title track than one expects to find in the slacker-friendly lo-fi genre. Elsewhere, the delicate "King Rides By" is an unvarnished love song that packs an equally powerful emotional wallop. Marshall sings with the most poignant, achy voice you can imagine, perfect for your most vulnerable, heart wrenching nights. An outstanding, underrated album. ![]()
| joyanne v.
- guelph, , canada |
| Cat Power's "What Would the Community Think" is a raw and beautiful album ... Marshall's title song is so honest and eerie that it will make you fall to your knees. Of all of Marshall's releases this is certainly the best--"Moon Pix" sounded a little too polished (not that a polished sound is bad ... but Moon Pix's polished sound seemed to take away from the roughness of what could have been) and "Myra Lee" had a tendency to unravel without any warning ... All the same you should buy this record ... it's smooth, rough, and softly tempermental. | |