Remember That I Love You

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (333 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 35:00

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Funny and Catchy...

GriffithsDavid

I don't mind lo-fi, done well, and this is great. It's an amusing mixture that I think could be described as childish vulgarity. Lots of catchy, melodic songs - Rollercoast, Loose Lips, and Tire Swing.

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So cute and light-hearted!

kjmorris

I love this album and I love Kimya Dawson. It's good 'real' music. Unassuming. Un-pretentious. She sings about simple things in a simple way and I love it!

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Different

Smurffy

I personally love this album, but it sounds very different then a lot of other music. If you like this you should check out "Antsy Pants" and "Belle&Sebastian." (Yes these are artist names.) I love this album because the songs have meanings, like growing up or getting over relationships.

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dleif siht etelpmoc esealp !

rent_girl

she sings (and plays) with the same crookedness of liz phair, but with the eccentricities of belle & seb, and the anthem-ness of chan marshall. which is not to say she's the sum of all those parts, or even as stunning as all that sounds, or even that i would write this review if i wasnt twirling around the room drunk as a skunk and singing this stuff but... isnt that saying enough?

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great

dansrobe

Great lyrics - not complex, but deep yet simple. And not just standard repackaged lyrics, but original and fresh. The music is stripped down, straight forward, and clear. She makes under done sensible and enjoyable. If you like pop music you won't like this.

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get off of me

chica2006

This is like babysitting a 6yr old who is trying to tell you about her day, while kicking you in the stomach and you are paying her for it.

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A bad Kimya Dawson album

boygriv

..is that redundant? So she writes stupid lyrics and plays acoustic chord progressions that insult the listener's intelligence, and then she does it for 12 tracks in a row. Now "Loose Lips" was cute when it was a free track on her website, but she really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really crapped it up by overproducing it. Stay away.

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Hmmmm

froggyswamp

Interesting??? I do like it, it's just very different. :)

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awful, insipid music

eyeH8ewe

geldriver is dead on here. How in the hell did anyone let this "artist" near a microphone? This is good for people in a coma: It'll either wake them up (to get up and turn this noise off), or kill them.

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Another single theme album

StuK

Oh dear, If you are trying to talk fast in your songs and speak about tiny problems, big problems, love stuff and little stories etc. etc., should you still try and fill up an entire album with that same monotone sh*t, accompanied by the minimum of required acoustics and rhythm!? Man, I need a drink or 10 before I try and listen this all at once...

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They Say All Media Guide

Kimya Dawson has, if nothing else, confidence in what she is and what has to say, and she wants other people to feel the same way about themselves, too. Which doesn’t mean that her fifth full-length release, Remember That I Love You, is an arrogant record; rather, it portrays an emotional honesty that, even in its weakness (“I’m trying to be brave/because when I’m brave other people feel brave/but I feel like my heart is caving in”) — or perhaps because of this admittance — contains a strength and humanity that’s seen in few contemporary artists. Dawson is concerned about the well-being of her listeners. She genuinely wants them to be happy. This desire to help, to be a friend, means that for Dawson, the musical portion of her songs (quickly strummed open acoustic guitar chords, the occasional bell or keyboard) takes a distant second place to her lyrics. Which is fine, because her words are so engaging, but it wouldn’t hurt her to experiment a little more with chord progressions or keys (an exception is the darker “France,” whose music, incidentally, she only co-wrote), as the melodies tend to blend easily into one another. The lyrics, however, are quite unique. Like any good folk (or anti-folk) singer, Dawson has a social consciousness that she’s more than willing to explicitly share (“and I’ll say f*ck Bush and f*ck this war” in “Looselips” or “We’d have 12/26 tattooed across our foreheads if something this atrocious happened on our coast instead” in “12/26,” a response to her feelings of helplessness after the 2004 tsunami), but she doesn’t come across as preachy or holier-than-thou. She’s honest, and she’s being herself, and that’s all she wants, from herself and others. Yes, sometimes it takes a bit of reading between the lines to filter through the slightly non-sequitur, or even bizarre, lyrics (“when I saw Genevieve I really liked it when she said/what she said about the giant and the lemmings on the cliff/she said ‘I like giants, especially girl giants/’cause all girls feel too big sometimes, regardless of their size”) to reach the underlying message underneath, but it’s kind of nice knowing that such positivity exists amidst the cynicism and anger of the outside world. – Marisa Brown

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