Fox Confessor Brings The Flood

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Fox Confessor Brings The Flood album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 38:54

eMusic Review 0

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Peter Blackstock

eMusic Contributor

01.11.10
For us, this is the right mix of high-octane reds and deep-water blues.
2008 | Label: Anti/Epitaph

Neko Case's 1998 debut The Virginian established her as a budding alt-country star, but since then, she's been broadening her horizons. Her subsequent solo records have drifted toward torch-singer territory, while her work with the New Pornographers is unadulterated indie-pop. On Fox Confessor Brings the Flood, all of those elements coalesce to create the most consistent and rewarding album of her career. Case's primary strength is still her voice, but whereas in the past she's often used it to over-dramatize, on Fox Confessor she strikes just the right balance between the high-octane reds and the deep-water blues. The resulting tones and textures, along with a reliance on richly romantic melodicism, make for music that's more pointedly pop than she's sounded in the past, but not so much as to be ordinary. There's still plenty of personality in Case's smoky and sultry voice, as well as in her often eccentric lyrical perspective. Those qualities are especially evident on the opening and closing tracks ("Margaret vs. Pauline" and "The Needle Has Landed"); but her emotions run deepest on the nostalgic ode "That Teenage Feeling" and the heartbreaking (if brief) ballad "At Last."

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Wonderful.

Existenz

I've always heard good things, but had never gotten into Neko Case. With this album I've been hooked. She has a distinctive and powerful voice that she uses well and the lyrics are strong and engaging. Favorite track is the title one.

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My Favorite Neko Album

madformusic

This is by far my favorite Neko Case album. I have Middle Cyclone but it doesn't do a lot for me. This one, though, gets played a lot. Great voice.

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Top of Her Game

Guitarzan

This is it. If you only buy one, this is it!!!

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arguably her best album

freeimprov

Neko Case is a fascinating musician, who grows in surprising new directions every time she makes a record. She's gone through periods of sophistication, one of which culminated in Fox Confessor Brings the Flood. The lyrics are oblique poetry, but with a remarkable concrete imagery that makes their meaning plain. Margaret Versus Pauline may be one of the best songs I've ever heard that way. Musically, her studio band was perfect, fleshing these songs out with enough meat to keep the off-kilter feel, but remaining accessible. The only other Neko Case album that I think is on this level is Blacklisted, which is less sophisticated and more direct, but that has its own charms. At any rate, it's wonderful. Get it!

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Neko Case hasn’t had much need to prove her credentials as a major artist since making her solo debut with 1997′s The Virginian, but she’s been refining her skills in the recording studio on each subsequent release, and with 2006′s Fox Confessor Brings the Flood she’s fashioned an album that can cautiously be called a masterpiece. As always, Case’s voice, an instrument of impressive strength, grace, and expressive power, is the star of this show, and she’s never sounded better than she does here, but what sets this apart from her other fine work is her growth as a songwriter and producer. Case wrote or co-wrote all 12 tracks on Fox Confessor Brings the Flood, and her tales of failed friendship, faith stretched to the breaking point, and love that causes as much ache as comfort are subtle and expressionistic but deeply evocative, conjuring images and feelings that linger long after the album has ended, especially the spectral “Star Witness,” the moody yet romantic “That Teenage Feeling” and “Hold on, Hold On,” and the darkly beautiful closer, “The Needle Has Landed.” And Case and her co-producer, Darryl Neudorf, have assembled a superb cast of musicians to accompany these songs, among them members of the Sadies and Calexico as well as Garth Hudson of the Band, Howe Gelb from Giant Sand, and Kelly Hogan. Together they’ve sculpted a dozen elegant sonic landscapes that are beautiful and richly detailed while meshing with the moody textures of the songs in their open space and unwillingness to crowd either the singer or the other players. The cumulative effect mirrors both the beauty and the sadness that lurks within the human heart, and Fox Confessor Brings the Flood is a rich, mature, and deeply satisfying piece of music that deserves and demands attention — if this isn’t Album of the Year material, it’s hard to say what is. – Mark Deming

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