Showing posts with label Willow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Willow. Show all posts

Saturday, 14 December 2024

Willow "Lately I Feel Everything" (2021)

 

Arriving at Willow's third record, endearing blemishes of youthful nativity emerge. Heart-brake pains and relationship woes dominate its theme. Musically, a similar line is tread. Both sway between raw adolescent reactivity and insightful, matured expressions. On its latter half, collaborations with Travis Barker boldly mimic teenage Pop Punk tracks of the early 00s, devoid of originality yet persuasive with repetitions.

The middle of the record is where the bulk of its magic lays. Instrumentals deviate from the opening simplistic pop appeal. Swells of grungy guitar distortions, dreamy acoustic reverberations and creative drum machine arrangements pull these songs to the edges of Shoegaze, Indie Rock and Emo, blurring lines along the way.

Typically, Willow sings from the soul, drifting around the texture of these tracks like a free spirit, often with power over softness, she occasionally roars into life with soft screams. On the softer side, soaring cadences amplify her thoughtful, introspective words. It turns the topicality of once immature anthems into reflective journeys. Its a curiosity to me how a tracks tone shapes ones experience, two contrasting sides of essentially the same expressive coin.

Lately I Feel Everything is mostly an exploration of an alternative umbrella of distortion guitar adjacent music. Willow crashes the party, muddying up ideas with an aesthetic rawness and endearing amateurish aesthetic. A perfect fit for the genre. Not quite as persuasive as whats to follow but also tainted by these interruptions of type-cast teeny bop music I despised in my youth. Naive and XTRA where the highlights for me.

Rating: 6/10

Friday, 29 November 2024

Willow "Coping Mechanism" (2022)

  

With a chronological step back from an adored Empathogen, Coping Mechanism shifts its fundamental appeal to serve my tastes immaculately. Willow's entangled expressions and gushes of emotional out-poor feel familiar, yet beneath the music nurtures antagonistic intensities, highlighting darker emotions of anger, frustration and sadness. Ever present overdrive guitars dabble in Alternative Rock, Grunge, Emo and Indie, amplifying a hurt in her lyrics. Sailing above with a playful, creative voice, she finds a beautiful resonance with the unsettled rumble of enthused guitar noise.

From a perspective, these songs could be boiled down to catchy Pop Rock songs centered on angsty teenage emotions. Fortunately the underpinning Pop sensibility blossoms with maturity. Willow's lyrics navigate emotional stresses, gracefully avoid the fallacy of simplicity. Her words dissect, introspect and reflect, mostly on the grief of a breakup, in search of a Coping Mechanism. Opposing aspects of these narratives explored often manifest into beautiful vocal inflections. Its a riveting tug and pull, back and forth, an internal mental battle channeled into infectious sing-alongs.

 Producer Chris Greatti and songwriter Asher Bank deserve high praise for their instrumentals. Creatively exploring the aforementioned genres, a Pop Punk ease and occasional touch of Metal aesthetic breeze by effortlessly. The duo weave it all into a cohesive set of both tuneful and mildly aggressive numbers without repeating themselves. One can hear many ideas pulled from across recent decades, rearranged into a new beast. Shifts in guitar tone and color, occasional synths and detailed drum grooves flesh out the experience with continuous variety that's immensely enjoyable.

Coping Mechanism flows, gushes with an infectious liveliness. Willow dances in the river, exuding expressive brilliance. Existing near to unreachable artistic perfection, devoid of weak spots, only its ending seems to dip slightly as the melancholy sways of No Control breaks down intensities for Batshit's return to animated eruptions feeling short of a final statement to wrap it all up. Other than that lack of a landing, this record has been utterly brilliant. Paying close attention to the track listing, trying to select my favorites, I realized the first nine songs are simply sublime. Just wonderful!

Rating: 9.5/10

Saturday, 26 October 2024

Willow "Empathogen" (2024)

 

Daughter of famed rapper slash actor Will Smith, the last I heard of Willow were remarks on her adolescent entry into pop music on Will's autobiography. It wasn't an appealing reason to check in, and according to critical pundits, It seems I've been spared this misfortunes of a youthful musician maturing from shaky foundations. Empathogen serves as my introduction to an artist who's not only found her voice, but expresses it with freedom, led by emotion and passion, venturing into curious spaces.

Elements of Progressive Rock, R&B, Soul and Jazz Rock emerge on a fruitful journey. Leaning into its oddities, dwelling on unconventional melodies, the record gracefully swings between jam session chemistries and structured Pop convention. Creative percussion has much of the record feeling playful and expressive. Willow layers her voice in riveting self duets, chiming in, spinning simple hooks into exciting swells.

It all feels so genuine and expressive. Songs naturally pivot into different vibes. Often upbeat in tone with differing rhythmic drives, her lyrically reflective presence anchors every song. Swaying into curious oddities like the catchy humming of No Words and a moody, esoteric Ancient Girl, the contemporary compositions get consistently exposed to an ear for infectious melodies and keen aesthetics to reshape its own mold.

Empathogen feels effortlessly accessible yet drifts slightly to the Avant-Garde from a Pop perspective. Lyrics play relatable through their abstraction, each empowered word and cry of feeling wrapped up in a breezy momentum. Best of all, Willow fits snugly with these stellar backing musicians who craft a compelling listen from start to end. I've been unable to put this one down for a while, each spin is still riveting.

Rating: 8/10