Thursday, September 21, 2017

Sarah Donner - Black Hole Heart (2016)



Written by William Cline, posted by blog admin


New Jersey headquartered singer/songwriter Sarah Donner has earned a certain amount of cachet in indie circles thanks to the success of her track “The Motherf**cking Pterodactyl Song”, but her talents extend much further than entertaining audiences with her wit and idiosyncratic sense of humor. The release Black Hole Heart amply illustrates this point. The album’s twelve songs bristle with effortless musicality thanks to her melodic gifts and fluid guitar playing, but their quality is largely driven by the light touch of her emotive vocals and exceptional songwriting skills. There’s a variety of emotions driving the tracks on this release, but those emotions are all united by a guiding intelligence and fully developed artistic sensibility that’s rare in both the mainstream and indie scene alike. There are few performers today who wield such a compelling balance of probing intimacy and full on musical ingenuity.

“Phoenix” explores a relatively common but durable metaphor in the arts and with loose, easy going confidence embodied by the acoustic guitar work and Donner’s vocal. She conveys the message behind the song with clear as a bell singing, but her emotive qualities help her stand out much more. Coupling her emotive range with evocative lyrics lightly touching on the myth underpinning the concept while artfully connecting them to her every day reality is the cherry on top of this delicious confection.  The title song has a sense of the grand surround it that’s inescapable – it’s due to two different factors contributing to this. The first is the lightly orchestration defining the track’s construction and the second is Donner’s masterfully handled vocal. Her voice is simply towering at key points during this track. Her storytelling powers emerge in full on the track “Tamsen Donner 1847” and the understated despair behind the narrative is nicely tempered by the sensitivity and devotion of Donner’s narrator. The musical accompaniment is understated as well but it has a crystalline beauty that’s quite appropriate for the track.

She brings organ and trumpet into play on “The Flood”, but they never assume any sort of dominant role and Donner does a superb job incorporating the instruments into her customary approach. Donner continues indulging her penchant for myth and metaphor with the track “Albatross” and it’s one of the album’s most successful straight ahead folk songs. There’s some double-tracking of Donner’s vocal during this performance that creates some interesting effects, especially because of her highly stylized take on this song. “Big Big Heart” is a piano driven ballad and speaks with an unflinchingly vulnerable voice. The lyrics are the sort that says more than their mere words convey and work splendidly within this arrangement. Even the most cynical music fan will find it difficult to not admire the sentiment and style informing this gem. One of the more special tracks distinguishing Black Hole Heart is “All The Things”. The terse acoustic guitar, fluid percussion, and duet vocal from Donner and guest Michael McLean are about as perfectly realized as such a piece could ever hope to be.  It’s moments like this performance and many others that make Sarah Donner’s Black Hole Heart such an enjoyable and rewarding musical experience.

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