The You And The Now

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (31 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 62:58

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Sounds like...

cpongracic

...a Tori Amos protégée.

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She's done better...

Mythosidhe

I've adored Jorane since the release of her debut record 'Vont Fou', but this is probably her weakest record to date. After trying repeatedly to listen to it and enjoy it, I finally gave up and went back to her older material. Thankfully with her latest disc 'Vers à soi' (also available from eMusic), Jorane returns to her former excellence. Download that one instead!

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Awesome!

QBoulevard

I love this album! The songs aren't the type you can easily sing along with so if you're looking for karaoke, this isn't the album for you. Nor is her music exactly "rock" except for "I feel love" and "Pour ton sourire." It isn't classical either, and don't worry; it isn't atonal avant-garde. Jorane's music is a breed of its own. I like to use several of her songs during the "stretch" part of my workout. They are slow enough and relaxing but have just enough tension to remind me that I'm still working out.

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partly great

JulianSimon

There are great songs on this album (Stay, Film II, Blue Planet, Pour Gabrielle, The Cave) but unfortunately some (Fragile, Red Mountains, Am I The Sky) are really hard to stand. Jorane reminds me of Tori Amos - an artist who also partly over-produces the songs. I would also recommend to check out Xyra & Verborgen or Maria Do Céu (http://www.emusic.com/artist/11592/11592275.html)

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They Say All Media Guide

The 28-year-old French-Canadian singer, songwriter, and cellist Jorane is no stranger to the recording studio; she has several solo albums to her credit and wrote soundtrack music for a number of films, including Unfaithful. But since all of her previous work has been written in French, her albums have mostly stayed north of the U.S. marketplace. The You and the Now, her first stateside release, finds her singing mostly in English and collaborating with such well-respected artists as Daniel Lanois and Michael Brook, while performing songs co-written with Lisa Germano and Simon Wilcox, among others. The mood is by turns downcast (“Fragile,” “Blue Planet”) and seductive (a brilliant cover of the disco classic “I Feel Love,” the heart-stoppingly sexy “Pour ton sourire”), and the tempos stay within the stately to slinky range, rarely involving anything like a funky beat or even an overt percussion part. At her best, Jorane pulls you out of yourself and sets you floating in a multi-layered musical cloud formation; at her not so best, like the rather self-indulgent “Am I the Sky,” she sounds like she’s maybe just a bit too full of herself. Highly recommended overall. – Rick Anderson

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