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Kelly Lee Owens 推出第二張大碟 Inner Song

Kelly Lee Owens 推出第二張大碟 <strong><em>Inner Song</em></strong>

Leslie Cheung about 4 years ago

Kelly Lee Owens 將於5月1日經 Smalltown Supersound 推出她第二張大碟 Inner Song。 大碟與一直合作的 James Greenwood 一齊灌錄。Kelly Lee Owens 指大碟從她「生命中最難過的三年」誕生。您可以收聽大碟首張細碟作品 "Melt!"

<strong><em>Inner Song</em></strong> 封面
Inner Song 封面

Inner Song
Arpeggi
On
Melt!
Re-Wild
Jeanette
L.I.N.E.
Corner Of My Sky - featuring John Cale
Night
Flow
Wake-Up

Kelly Lee Owens’ masterful second album Inner Song finds the convention-blurring techno producer and singer/songwriter diving deep into her own psyche—excoriating the struggles she’s faced over the last several years and exploring personal pain while embracing the beauty of the natural world. It’s a leap in artistry from a musician who burst forth on the scene with a confident, rich sound, and is endlessly enticing when it comes to what Owens is capable of.

Inner Song follows the star-making debut of Owens’ 2017 self-titled album, a quixotic blend of body-moving beats and introspective songwriting that garnered numerous accolades from the music press. Owens has indeed come a long way from her background as a nurse; since then, she’s released an indelibly clubby two-tracker, 2019’s “Let It Go” b/w “Omen,” and teamed up with like-minded auteur Jon Hopkins on the one-off “Luminous Spaces.”

Her latest album also comes off of what Owens describes as “the hardest three years of my life,” an emotionally fraught time that, in her words, “definitely impacted my creative life and everything I’d worked for up to that point. I wasn’t sure if I could make anything anymore, and it took quite a lot of courage to get to a point where I could make something again.”

Inner Song was largely written and recorded over a month last winter. As with her debut, Owens holed up in the studio with collaborator James Greenwood. Letting loose in the studio and being open to whatever sonic whims emerge was essential to Owens’ craftwork. “With the first album, I was so obsessed with getting the right sound straightaway, which hindered the flow of ideas,” she explains. “This time around, I let go of my perfection in the initial moment for the ideas to fully flourish and become what they want to be.”

While the unexpected cover of Radiohead’s “Arpeggi” might strike some as an unconventional way to open a sophomore effort, to Owens the winding take on the classic tune—recorded a year before work on Inner Song properly kicked off—represents the sort of sonic rebirth that’s so essential to the album’s aura.

“I’m a massive Radiohead fan, so it’s sacrilege in a way,” she chuckles. “But I wanted to give my take on a track that always sounded like running through synth arpeggios to me. To me, it sounds like rising out of something quite bleak and hopeless, and resurfacing—a comeback from where I was.” “Arpeggi” leads into Inner Song‘s “On,” a rustling electro-pop glimmer that gives way to yo-yo synths and a tough-as-nails techno backbeat—the alpha and omega of the Kelly Lee Owens experience, reflective of her ability to contain sonic and emotional multitudes within just one song.

Owens’ personal roots are as present as her sonic predilections too, as fellow Welsh artist and avant-garde legend John Cale lends his distinctive pipes to the foreboding “Corner of My Sky.” “John and I worked together previously in a session and formed a connection. I realized that I could hear his voice over this psychedelic lullaby. I dared to ask him if he’d contribute to the track and use some Welsh language in there.”

Elsewhere, “Melt!”—one of the last tracks written for Inner Song—dives into the ever-pressing issue of climate change, right down to its structural composition: “I always need at least one techno banger in there to balance things out. I knew I wanted to create something that sounded hard with organic samples—one of those samples was melting glacial ice, another was people skating on ice. I felt those were great representations of what’s happening in the world. Every moment you’re breathing and sleeping, this is taking place.”

The evocative title of the album is borrowed from free-jazz maestro Alan Silva’s 1972 opus. “Those two words really reflect what it was like to make this record. I did a lot of inner work in the past few years, and this is a true reflection of that.” The hair-raising bass and tickling textures of Inner Song drive home that, more so than ever, Owens is locked in to delivering maximal sonic pleasure—as evidenced by the decision to make the album’s vinyl release a sesquialbum, or triple-sided album: “I’m still obsessed with frequencies that don’t do well on vinyl if they don’t have the space.”

“The power of conceptualizing who you are has really informed this album,” Owens states about Inner Song‘s essence, and her second album is truly a discovery of self—the latest statement from a fascinating artist who continues to surprise.

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