eMusic Review
You might know Laura Veirs as this year’s Folk-Singin’ Hot Girl to Watch: the Decemberists’ Colin Meloy is already calling her latest record “the best album of 2010,” and Jim James of My Morning Jacket, that loveable weirdo-beardo who also sings backup here, insists that Veirs is like “a queen bee that… makes honey in the hairs of my cochlea” — and, uh, we think that’s a good thing. After seven albums of rootsy folk hymns carefully plucked on a nylon-string guitar, it’s about time the Portland singer-songwriter is finally getting recognized, just in time for her best album yet. Recorded in a barn, July Flame feels as organic as a Fair Trade coffee bean, with banjo, piano and guitar wicking together a woodsy, fresh-air sound. These are naked love songs, though they’re less boy-meets-girl than girl-falls-hard-for-the-world stories. Exulting in tiny moments of beauty, Veirs celebrates the firecracker-orange of a summer peach (“July Flame”), the rustle of snakes in the grass (“I Can See Your Tracks”), the sight of sap that drips like “blood trapped inside the maple tree / the sunlight trapped inside the wood” (“Make Something Good”). She should count her voice among those small wonders: sweet and… read more »