Love Remains

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Love Remains album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 38:46

eMusic Review 0

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Marissa G. Muller

eMusic Contributor

Marissa G. Muller has written about music professionally since she was 19, just don't ask about her age now. Her work has appeared in Pitchfork, EYE WEEKLY, Ind...more »

09.07.10
A majestic montage of piping harmonies, broken samples, tiny percussion and vapor-trail synth notes
2010 | Label: Lefse Records / The Orchard

How to Dress Well's Tom Krell may share Neon Indian and Washed Out's chillwave foundation, but How to Dress Well's startling sonic breadth distinguishes Krell's crackling slow-jams from his contemporaries. Love Remains is a majestic montage of piping harmonies, broken samples, tiny percussion and vapor-trail synth notes — a heartfelt invitation for Krell's listeners to receive his lo-fi gospel.

Love Remains is propelled by Krell's vocals. Equally indebted to dream pop vanguards CocoRosie and R&B chart-topper R. Kelly, Krell's songs are a catalogue of borrowed vocal riffs: That shrill resonance in the empyrean "Suicide Dream 2" may sound like 5th-octave piano notes but they're actually the background vocals from CocoRosie's "Brazilian Sun." And while Krell can't match R. Kelly's silky tenor, his reverb-laden coos are nearly as sensual. "You Won't Need Me Where I'm Goin'" is an inverted rendition of Kelly's "I'll Never Leave": Where Kelly's "I'll Never" opens with consoling whispers, Krell's "You Won't Need" begins with a feedback-inducing squall — and quickly unravels into desperate pleas. Krell's lyrics appear mostly as creaks and murmurs, but the listener doesn't need to decipher the narrative. The cuts on Love Remains are feelings, not statements.

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Can't see my own face

Pinoke

Here are my thoughts on a track from this album: http://tr4ckstar.com/2010/10/07/how-to-dress-well-cant-see-my-own-face/

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Meh, so far.

MattEightZeroTwo

Still have to listen to it some more, but initially it just sounds like a Burial knockoff mashed with a Bon-Iver knockoff.

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Not Available

Bullet

Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available, Not Available,

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artistic choices

hekubus

it seams highly likely to me that the distortion heard on some tracks was intentional, though i have not heard a cd version of these tracks. sometimes artists take their favorite ideas too far. still, it works well on some tracks and you certainly don't have to download the ones you don't like the sound of, so seriously, chill out and enjoy the tracks you like instead of freaking out about choices you don't agree with.

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fresh air breathed into our souls.

Suprum

it's inventive in some instances and it's recycled in other parts. both are good executions. don't try to read too much into what he is trying to accomplish here; it's good music. just appreciate it and walk away with the melodies in your heart.

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Love the distortion

Robo-Sasquatch

Yeah, I love the distortion on this album. Reminds me of 2009's Washed Out album, Life of Leisure. In both cases the degraded sound adds texture and ambience, feels like listening to found sounds, hazy memories. I love it.

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Krell: Please re-record

troyjack1

The songs sound awesome, but the production quality will keep me from getting this album. It sounds like when my ipod cord isn't inserted all the way. Sorry, I just don't understand why someone would want to kill their songs with shitty production.

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Awesome!

Giaddon

This is really great! Like Bon Iver's sex jams. Maybe grab "Suicide Dream 2" as a test - if you like it, grab the whole thing.

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Despite the abundance of lo-fi acts and artists revisiting the sounds of their childhood in 2010, How to Dress Well remained unique. Tom Krell’s fractured background, which included loving late-‘80s R&B as a little boy, playing in bands throughout high school, and recording drone music in college and beyond, came together as something organic in Love Remains. Krell released many of these songs in a prolific burst of free EPs in late 2009 and early 2010, garnering buzz from critics who treated them like aural Rorschach blots, hearing Panda Bear, Michael Jackson, dubstep, Shai, and Bon Iver in Krell’s dense, soulful songs. Though it’s perfect fodder for analyzing, Love Remains doesn’t sound calculated — often, it sounds like it was recorded by accident. The album is so lo-fi that it hisses, clips, and goes into the red regularly, but Krell makes the most of this, evoking the power of memories, dreams, and impressions. These songs weren’t meant to be heard clearly — tracks such as “You Hold the Water” sound like they’re seeping through walls, or like they’re half-remembered, with memories and emotions circling in a feedback loop that would overload any recording equipment. Krell reworks the R&B of his childhood just as deftly as he repurposes Love Remains’ conventionally bad recording techniques. The fluidity of the melodies and the spare beats are rooted in late-‘80s/early-‘90s R&B — it’s no coincidence that one of How to Dress Well’s definitive songs, “Ready for the World,” shares its name with the ‘80s R&B group. However, Krell isn’t aping this style so much as transforming it into an expression of what it means to him; on “My Body,” he croons, “I was hopin’ for the rain, I was hopin’ for you,” surrounded by blissful and desolate electronics before the track cuts off abruptly, like someone turned off the radio. Krell’s vocals, which range from angelic sighs to piercing falsettos, are the conduit for Love Remains’ emotions, channeling regret on “Suicide Dream 2” and getting lost in the moment on “Can’t See My Own Face.” At times things approach soundtrack-like abstraction, particularly on “Walking This Dumb,” a live recording that sounds like it was captured about 500 yards away from the club. However, as Love Remains progresses, the songs get closer to Krell’s influences, and while “Lover’s Start” and “Decisions” might be a hair less intriguing than the album’s more damaged cuts, they show that How to Dress Well doesn’t need to be tampered with to have impact. Were they recorded and produced more cleanly, they could be hits, but that’s not the point of Krell’s music: its unfinished, imperfect quality makes it an intimate experience for listeners, letting them connect the dots in their own ways. Love Remains is a striking debut, one that speaks to how we listen to and remember music we love, and the impact it makes on everything else we hear. – Heather Phares

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