July Flame

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (359 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 44:05

eMusic Review

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Melissa Maerz

eMusic Contributor

01.12.10
Probably the honey-voiced singer-songwriter’s best yet — and that’s saying something
2010 | Label: Raven Marching Band / Redeye

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 »

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Best of 2010

section2

A beautiful album, through and through. Each song is a tiny, quiet gem. Excellent for warm, slow summer nights on the front porch.

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Great songs

Petronius

Great songs, really interesting arrangements. Great lyrics: "The pollinators flex their wings/ And take into the air/ Spin their emeraldine/ Webs across the swales and prairies". Highly recommended.

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Love it

aquaductagious

This album is probably the most fun album I've purchased in quite some time. I really like her songwriting, story telling and overall vibe.

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Keeper

ToCoolForRadio

I'm usually not a fan of many female singer/songwriters for some reason, but this one is definitely a keeper. It took a little bit of time to grow on me, but I'm certainly glad I gave it the opportunity to do so. Its strength is more in its subtlety than in any flashy bursts of addictive hooks.

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Subtle Gems

Palomino-Royalle

This is an album that rewards repeated listens. Veirs has a knack for unusual melodies and beautiful, sometimes unearthly, harmonies. The songs are given subtle but very effective arrangements -- listen attentively and you might hear little hints of Memphis horns, Burt Bacharach and Brian Wilson. Still, to my ears, none of it seems imitative. Laura Veirs has developed a distinctive sound of her own, and I'm getting very hooked on it.

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Exquisite

MusicGalNC

Thoughtful, lyrical, lovely...Can't get enough of this beautiful songstress...

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A Summer Delight

Jimerica

One of the best discs I've heard in a long time. Perhaps one of the greatest pieces of music to grace a compact disc in recent memory.

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Superb Melodies

Harkness

I keep coming back for the title track and Summer is the Champion, but as I prefer and enjoy listening to an entire album I keep finding new and enjoyable bits that keep me surprised and pleased. Very solid work.

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Addicting

jenmex

I've listened to this album 50 times in the past week and its not getting old. Beautiful music that makes you long for lazy summer afternoons with a cocktail in the sun...

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near perfect!

rogermott

this album deserves a lot more buzz. If the world is just this gem will show up in many top-ten lists. Download, listen, and spread the word!

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They Say All Media Guide

In some ways, July Flame might seem to mark a kind of scaling back for Laura Veirs. After a few years on Nonesuch, she has returned to the indie world, and where those Nonesuch releases found her pursuing a more band-oriented, rockish direction, this one harks back to Veirs’ folkie beginnings; the arrangements are centered squarely around her own acoustic picking. That’s not to imply that July Flame is any kind of step backwards, though; Veirs’ producer/boyfriend, Tucker Martine, is still helping her to turn her visions into reality, as he has done since 2003′s Troubled by the Fire, and there’s a full complement of players supporting those visions here — they’re simply deployed in a more subtle manner. Veirs cut her regular band loose before the making of July Flame, mostly for logistical reasons, hence the change of direction. There are a couple of relatively rhythmic cuts here, like the title track, and the backbeat-driven “Summer is the Champion,” whose pounding piano, ‘60s pop guitar, and horn punctuation evoke Sgt. Pepper’s-era Beatles, but they are exceptions to the rule. When Veirs sings “I want nothing more than to float with you” on “Little Deschutes” (Deschutes is a county in her and Martine’s home state of Oregon, in case you were wondering), it can be seen as both an emotional agenda and a musical mission statement. In terms of the latter, a number of tunes on July Flame seem to be rooted in — if not overtly inspired by — Veirs and Martine’s state of romantic bliss, especially the dreamy “When You Give Your Heart.” If their personal connection is anything like their musical one it’s easy to understand why; Martine brings just the right touches to the tracks, with eerie backing vocals, coloristic percussion, and evocative strings popping up at just the right moments and then disappearing again when they’re no longer needed. There are no wasted notes anywhere on July Flame, neither in Martine’s production nor Veirs’ tightly written (but still expressionistically poetic) compositions. – James Allen

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