From time to time, we like to round up the all-important, all-summarizing last sentences of the biggest new-music reviews. Under consideration in this installment is the new full-length by Aimee Mann, @#%&*! Smilers, which hits stores today:
• “Mann may not have found answers to all of life’s questions on Smilers– the search for self is perpetual, after all–but each attempt means refinements to her craft. This time, the strong songwriting and astute musical arrangements combine to make Mann’s latest her best album so far.” [Hartford Courant]
• “Midway through another nuanced collection of mid-tempo ’70s-pop-referencing tunes that document the lives of folks who manage only fleeting moments of happiness between protracted stretches of frustration, this L.A-based veteran songwriter runs head-on into what she typically approaches sideways. ‘I thought my life would be better by now,’ she sighs over an anxious keyboard riff in ‘Thirty One Today,’ a song about getting older (but no wiser) that’s so simple and catchy and scarily true that it opens an ordinarily shut door into Mann’s dimly lit, astutely rendered world.” [Spin]
• “Billed as a dramatic change in sound, but not really–there certainly are new instrumental textures, but basically it’s still a collection of Aimee Mann songs. Which means, since she couldn’t write a bad or even mediocre song even after extensive waterboarding, that it immediately springs to the top ranks of this year’s releases. Just the tonic for all those mellow, mopey female singer/songwriters littering the landscape.” [USA Today]
• “As a writer and performer of lovelorn, piano- and guitar-driven pop music, Mann stands with the best of her era. She can sum up universal relationship complications in three-minute, eminently hummable musical nuggets. Cases in point: smoldering love song ‘True Believer’; the earnest, string-laden ballad ‘It’s Over’; and ‘Columbus Avenue,’ where a street serves as metaphor for an ex’s downfall. Plus, on album standout ‘Phoenix,’ an elegantly turned melody accompanies a singer still working things out in her head as the highway takes her farther from a misguided lover.” [Billboard]























This record is definitely one of her best and is, as promised, a return to her traditional songwriting form and formulas. I think it has to be difficult for Aimee Mann to make a bad record.
The album title still gets me every time, it is certainly inventive, despite how I’d comment against its if I any real arguments backing me up. Either way, I just looked up one of the new songs on Youtube (thanks progress!) and there’s not much I can say, it ain’t my style, but all possible writing material has been already summarized by Hartford Courant, Spin, USA Today and Billboard.
/tame comment.
Wait a second, is this record’s title actually referring to an expletive directed towards the New York deli chain? If so, I have uttered this title’s sentiment upon numerous occasions, with varying degrees of voice loudness.
@Eugene Langley: I think it’s more directed against happy people, but… heh. That works too.
Can I mention that I don’t exactly get this ongoing feature? I always thought it was supposed to point up some universal or amusing truths about summing-up sentences in reviews, but each of these excerpts is more than one sentence long. The Spin one is, in fact, the entire review, and the Billboard one is very nearly the entire review. And why Hartford?
Wait, the USA Today one is the whole review, too. So this is really just a sort of blurb roundup, plus: Hartford.
The Forgotten Arm is tough to trump, and I admit to missing the narrative that formed that record when I hear the weaker parts of Smilers. But then again, I felt the same way about the last record at first, second and third listen, so…
@ragandboneshop: I don’t think there’s any universal truth to be found in record reviews, pal.
hard to imagine its as good as whatever or im with stupid but i will buy the cd no matter