C'mon Miracle

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C'mon Miracle album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 36:07

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beautiful music

lewsurfer

I guess emusic earned its membership fees this month. This was a wonderful referral. I had never heard of Mirah before, but I'm glad that I've heard of her now. There are plenty good female singer/songwriters, however, Mirah is set above most because of her voice. Crisp, clear and pleasing to the ear. I advise you to dl any of her albums.

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Awestruck

authentic

This album is phenomenal. The starting sweet chords of "Nobody Has to Stay" intensify into the vibrant "Jerusalem" and weave back and forth from the loud and wonderful to the soft and wonderful until the phenomenal closer "Exactly Where We're From." This is a wonderful piece of art and if you are at all considering getting it I highly recommend it.

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Mmm...

Chicago1

"Don't Die In Me" is a wonderful track.

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a flawless miracle

thecasioconspiracy

i'm admittedly biased, because my daughter happens to also be names Mira (different spelling, same pronunciation) coincidentally, we discovered Mirah shortly after our daughters birth through a serendipitous twist of fate. incidentally, Mirah happens to be one of the most prolific and consistent female songwriters I have ever come across. each song a beautiful piece of poetry that simultanesouly emanates a distincly feminine fragility alongside a creative confidence. the result: albums that you can just let play over and over again.

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in addition 2

free-slave

DL-don't die in me and/or exactly where we're from

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eMusic Features

0

My Dozen

By Jennifer O'Connor, eMusic Contributor

A really great melody is the first thing I notice in a song — whether it's a vocal or a guitar melody; something really strong and memorable. What will also happen sometimes is that one lyric will jump out at me, and that will make me listen more. If I'm just casually listening and a lyric jumps out that I really like, that will cause me to investigate further. I'm basically looking to find an… more »

0

My Dozen

By Jennifer O'Connor, eMusic Contributor

A really great melody is the first thing I notice in a song -- whether it's a vocal or a guitar melody; something really strong and memorable. What will also happen sometimes is that one lyric will jump out at me, and that will make me listen more. If I'm just casually listening and a lyric jumps out that I really like, that will cause me to investigate further. I'm basically looking to find an… more »

They Say All Music Guide

A much quieter and more thoughtful album than any of her previous releases, Mirah’s C’Mon Miracle doesn’t grab the listener by the ears and boldly proclaim its greatness the way that her last album, Advisory Committee, did. Instead of offering the scattershot brilliance of that album or You Think It’s Like This but It’s Really Like This, C’Mon Miracle is more focused, more mature, and closer to a traditional singer/songwriter’s work. This doesn’t mean that it’s conventional or boring though — far from it. Even though the subtlety and complexity of songs like “Nobody Has to Stay” and “Promise to Be Kind” show how much her craft has grown over the years, the album still has enough of a K Records feel to keep fans of Mirah’s smart, creative indie pop happy. The wonderfully sympathetic artist-producer relationship between her and Phil Elvrum is a key part of C’Mon Miracle, helping to balance the album’s more serious leanings and her more whimsical-sounding earlier work. For the most part, Elvrum’s production is understated and far less busy than that of Advisory Committee. On songs like “Jerusalem” — which was intended for a Hanukkah compilation but rejected because it was too political (it criticizes Israel’s hawkish behavior in the most poetic terms) — he sets Mirah’s voice like a jewel, surrounding it with pretty but unobtrusive arrangements. However, that just means that C’Mon Miracle’s elaborately produced moments stand out even more. “The Light” — which appeared on Mirah’s collaboration with the Black Cat Orchestra, To All We Stretch the Open Arm, with a very different arrangement — gets the deluxe Elvrum treatment: it begins with distant, quasi-industrial percussion and stormy guitars and ends on a surprisingly gentle note. “We’re Both So Sorry” is even more elaborate, using autoharp, brass, double-tracked vocals, fuzzed-out percussion, and guitars to underscore the duality of the song’s breakup lament. These songs, along with “The Struggle” (on which Elvrum is credited with playing the chest), recall Advisory Committee’s glory, and even though it’s tempting to want all of C’Mon Miracle to sound like this, the album does have its own distinctive character, particularly on the tracks inspired by Mirah’s trip to Buenos Aires; “Don’t Die in Me” and especially “The Dogs of B.A.” integrate Latin folk influences into her sound effortlessly. “Look Up,” meanwhile, rocks harder than anything she’s ever done before, and the charming chamber pop of “Exactly Where We’re From” also proves that Mirah hasn’t forsaken the eclectic spirit of her music. An album about war, peace, and longing, C’Mon Miracle isn’t as showy as some of her previous outings, but it does show that Mirah’s music works on both a large and small scale. – Heather Phares

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