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Sorry, Bat for Lashes, but Annie has usurped your crown for "Album of the Year" honors! I've finally gotten my thoughts out in the form of a proper review! One for the All Night EP will surely follow.
Annie- Don't Stop
2009
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"Let's go, you have no control (you have no control over me)" calls Annie during "Don't Stop" in a voice much more strident and direct than her typically airy delivery. Given the nearly 2-year battle Annie waged in releasing this album, this line stands as quite a powerful and inspiring message. The world of pop music is a tricky one, as a singer merely having some sort of input into the production and sound of an album is not so commonplace, let alone a genuine battle over artistic integrity. Indeed, it's rare and quite refreshing to find such a blue-collar work ethic applied within the genre as Annie presents on Don't Stop. And while it is evident that Annie has poured over a massive array of musical output in amalgamating her assortment of influences, the end result amazingly does not sound forced or contrived, but rather a natural release of bottled creativity. Consequently, Don't Stop plays like the classic pop record it is.
One thing that distinguishes Annie from her more successful pop contemporaries is that her devotion to music is so palpable. This obsession is demonstrated several times throughout the album, as many of the songs seem to be about music itself. The opener "Hey Annie" acts as a call to arms of sorts, with Annie urging her listeners to discover a new sound and a new voice while assuaging them "we're all here for the better, in the music you might discover a new pulse, a new beat, a new love" with a sort of reassurance that resonates from somebody who has been through the battlefield. Like "Don't Stop", "Hey Annie" is another new addition to the album since she and Island parted ways. The third new track also references music, but in a much more playful, cutting way. The electro-pop of "I Don't Like Your Band" recalls the sweet sass that made "Chewing Gum" and "Me Plus One" so tantalizing, but with an added bite. Throughout the song, Annie disparages her guy's musical output as passé, complete with cutting lines such as "your latest 7-inch sounds obscene unless you spin it at 45". The solution to this musical impasse? A quick refresher course on Kraftwerk, Bobby O and Moroder for starters! Then she implores "1. Gotta ditch your influences then, 2. Start it all again, 3. Buy yourself a sequencer and then 4. Let the games begin". The acerbic lyrics are matched with an appropriately percolating chug, making it a great candidate for a single, and with Annie subverting the typical gender associations of musical snobbery, it is quite memorable.
As great as these two songs are, they are still overshadowed by the song that closes the first half of the album, "Songs Remind Me of You". Having just referenced Giorgio Moroder on the previous song, Annie and co-captain Richard X successfully emulate the vitalic pulse of his music with a paean to a producer-singer relationship gone sour. It roars out of the gate on all cylinders before launching into one of the best bridges I've heard in a song in many years- the kind of bridge that promises a truly cataclysmic chorus, and one that Annie promptly delivers with a heavenly "How does it feel to hear your songs on the radio? And does it hurt to hear your songs on the radio?" Truly epic stuff.
Also peppered throughout the album are remnants of the grand commercial plan set forth when the album was meant to break Annie to the mainstream with Island Records. Hit producers Xenomania are at the helm on five of the tracks on the album. First and foremost is the scorching "My Love Is Better", which features Alex Kapranos on guitar and formerly featured Xenomania darlings Girls Aloud as backing vocalists before a separate record company dispute ensued in the removal of their input. It sounds every bit like the snappy, whizzing quirk-pop that garnered Girls Aloud and their producers critical and commercial adulation, but Annie manages to make the song her own. "Loco" likewise bites from the Girls Aloud tree, but Annie injects her trademark weirdness during a second verse gloriously adorned with some rousing synth octave sequences. The album closer "Heaven and Hell" sounds like a lost soundtrack song for a hit British romantic comedy, while its predecessor "When the Night" is nothing short of a soaring pop ballad that absolutely drips of wistful childhood nostalgia as Annie's sweetness is on full display. The best of these songs, however, is the urgent pop/rock of "Bad Times", which is the album's closest cousin to hyper-ballad "Heartbeat". Perfectly showcasing Annie's beautiful balance of happiness laced with a streak of melancholy, the song sees Annie pining over a doomed relationship, revealing that bad times "never sounded so good". Thankfully, the producers allow Annie to breathe her magic throughout the song, making it quite the emotional heavyweight.
Nevertheless, no Annie album is complete without some unabated weirdness. Nobody better understands this side to Annie than Timo Kaukolampi, and the results are even more vibrant and striking than his contributions on Anniemal. First is the harrowing beauty of "Marie Cherie", an ode to a girl Annie once knew in her school years. Adorned in lush orchestration, frenzied beats and grandiose percussion, it wouldn't sound out of place on a Björk album. Annie implies that she didn't know the titular character all that well, but that she used to stop by to see if she was ok. Marie's ill fate leads to her death, and it appears that she was a victim of sexual abuse: "A lone butterfly that's caught in amber, always your daddy's little girl". However, the direct cause of her demise, like the song itself, is shrouded in mystery. Particularly affecting is the beginning of the second verse, as the combination of Annie's perfectly coldly breathed lyrics "Oh no he did not treat you right, your innocence is lost, you never had the chance to fly" with the stabbing string squeals is truly chill-inducing. Thankfully, the song is followed by the alluring seduction of "Take You Home". Not the kind of pop star to exploit the sexual angle for success, the fact that Annie lets down her guard here is all the more potent. A dark current of tension rumbles underneath the surface, and Annie seems powerless to resist the appeal of a one-night stand, shedding her paranoia and fear: "looking for trouble, that's what I am, playing a game we both understand". The next song seems to follow on from those events, and she really flies off the rails with an unbridled zaniness that is nothing less than irresistible. "The Breakfast Song" features a manic synth line undercut by some tempestuous percussion as Annie repeatedly demands "What do you want? What do you want for BREAKFAST", literally shouting the last word. She can barely keep up with herself, her restless energy forcing her to gush about having a swim or a holiday. While it sounds like a relentless rush of excitement, like all great Annie songs, there is a duality in the emotion. An undercurrent of insecurity means she basically would prefer anything to the quiet reflection of their relationship status, but she relents in the end, simply confessing, "I know you. Know me! I love you. Love me!" These adventurous excursions are all lumped together, and they lend the album a crucial smattering of texture and depth.
Above all else, Don't Stop is what a pop album should sound like in 2009- studious but not overly studied, varied but not disconnected, and both ephemeral and timeless. Each of the twelve songs are competing to stay in my head, and above all else, the album is so injected with Annie's joyful personality that it really feels like she earned it rather than inheriting some catchy tracks through good fortune or industry position. It is unlikely that the album will achieve the commercial scope it deserves, but this is yet again another truly valiant effort. On a personal note, I can attest that I have loved a lot of music from this decade, but only ten or so albums have truly felt like "events". Anniemal was certainly one of them, but Don't Stop is right there with it. While listening to the album, I've caught myself smiling and even laughing our of sheer joy, and I just don't do that! Somehow, some way, Annie has crafted a truly perfect concoction of music that elicits an unending well of joy in my spirit, and that is no small feat. While I'm sure that this is in large part due to the anticipation of the much-delayed release of this album, I truly feel that Don't Stop is a seminal pop release. "Don't underestimate me", she decrees during the title track. With an album this great, I don't think you have to worry about that much longer, Miss Strand.
Of course, that should read "laughing out of sheer joy" in the last paragraph.
And now a review of the All Night EP!
With all of the drama surrounding the release of Don't Stop resulting in a number of extended delays, Annie had recorded a rather large amount of material in time for its eventual release. The tracklist evolved over time as this new material was incorporated into the full-length album, but Annie generously treated fans to this EP in response, including all three tracks that were culled from Don't Stop, orphaned single "Anthonio" and the newest of the bunch, "All Night". Amazingly, these songs fit quite well together and reveal that Annie's bursting creativity extended well beyond the limits of Don't Stop. The result is a pop bonanza in its own right- a varied sort of mini-treatise on pop music that reveals that her pop acumen comes painted with a very wide brush.
It begins with "All Night", a deliciously funky jaunt that sounds like an homage to Roger Troutman, vocoder and all. Glitchy synthesizers augment the fat bass lick, offering sample-worthy as opposed to sample-heavy thrills. Next up is the originally planned first single "I Know Ur Girlfriend Hates Me", which buzzes along to a sizable hook and showcases a wonderful sense of humor, as Annie playfully mimics the annoying tendencies of the subject's jealous girlfriend, enunciating the "ringadingading ding ding ding" of her frequent calls before warning that "life's too long for you to get it wrong", a refreshingly funny and different sentiment to the typical "life is short, don't hesitate" motif so ubiquitous in pop music.
The middle track of the EP also forms its heart. "Anthonio" plays like a letter to a vanished ex, as Annie recounts the events that led to her heartbreak: a whirlwind romance with the titular lothario with "a silver tongue" full of promises left unfulfilled as her subsequent letters are "returned to sender". She sings with a cold detachment that is matched by several layers of truly icy synths that rise and fall in sines and cosines before bubbling over into a rather glorious chorus. The first four words are completely loaded with emotion ("Oh Anthonio" echoing her disappointment and heartache; "my Anthonio" revealing that she still cares) and given a truly lilting melody to convey a real sense of mourning. She then goes on to question whether she ever really mattered to him and if he ever wonders about her anymore. A key change augments the tension, while Annie dejectedly admits, "you got everything you ever wanted from me," while accepting that she was "just another girl" and it was "just another night" before dropping the ultimate bombshell: "My baby has your eyes". The rapturous pulse of the song coupled with Annie's bleeding heart make it perhaps the greatest example of Annie's blissful melancholy in her entire career. It follows that "Anthonio" is not only the best song to emerge out of the Don't Stop era, but one of the best pop songs of the entire decade.
After such emotional voltage, the EP then meanders into a duet with Fredrik Saroea of Datarock on "I Can't Let Go", with the singers trading paranoid lines about their on-and-off relationship. It is a genuinely frenzied excursion into unabated synth pop, bursting at the seams with a nervous energy straight out of 1981. So infectious is its pull and so impetuous is its frantic pace that it somehow manages to not feel like a letdown in the monstrous wake of "Anthonio", which is quite some feat. The album closes with some Xenomania muscle in the form of "Sweet", injected with generous helpings of, well, Annie sweetness so as to assure that it one-ups many of its cousins that qualified for inclusion on Don't Stop.
All Night is much more than a mere set of bonus tracks to accompany Don't Stop- it is a worthy and weighty release in its own right. The entire EP is over in under 18 minutes, but it stands as another startling testament to Annie's status as a pop icon at the very forefront of the genre. As a rather humorous anecdote, I first spun this EP on my familiar trip to play basketball at a local gym of which I've been a member for over 3 years, and I got so caught up in the music that I somehow managed to get lost! And really, that says more about its appeal than any further exposition could.
you know, moonbeam, i always feel bad when you post these big posts and get no responses. you put a lot of work into your reviews and i wanted to let you know i appreciate them. I looked up some songs by annie and they're actually quite good. I wonder if you also like Fever Ray's debut? it seems like a more sinister version of annie's album.
S'been on my buy list ever since I heard about it. Just have to wait a few weeks for it's US release.
Anniemal had the better songs, but Don't Stop is good from top to bottom (other than The Breakfast Song). Songs Remind Me of You absolutely great, Bad Times is really good and it's been a long time since I've heard a good pop ballad but When the Night manages to walk the fine line between beauty and cheese.
Moonbeam, while I can't say I share your fondness for Annie's music, I can certainly appreciate your enthusiasm for the artists you love and the time it takes to write all these reviews. I pulled out my mom's copy of "Rhythm Nation 1814" awhile back after your review, and to my surprise it was better than I thought. (Unfortunately, that bar was rather low, and Janet isn't really rising too far up on my "favorite artists" list). We can't all have the same tastes, but I do envy your enthusiasm for yours. Keep up the good work!
thanks once again for posting this, moonbeam. i just got into an argument over facebook (a bad idea, i know) over pop music and my opposer was arguing for britney spears (or her musical writers, rather) and he thought i hated all pop music (which isn't true in the real sense of "pop music" but i take that his definition is much different than how we use it in here) so i used Annie as an example of how pop SHOULD be.